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A Bob Dylan Book Club

Join us! It's FREE! We meet monthly! Receive notifications of book selections and meeting dates, receive Zoom links to join meetings, participate in online discussions, and access special content we've developed for this website. We are a GUILT-FREE book club--attend even if you have not read the book (the discussion may convince you to read it!).


✓ Receive notifications & Zoom links
✓ Participate in online discussions
✓ Access special content:
✓ MEMBER PROFILES
✓ BOOK IMPRESSIONS & BOOK CORNER

Whether or not you are a member, explore and enjoy the Public Pages from the links in the banner above. If you are a Member, you can navigate to the Member Pages with the link in the banner as well. If you are not logged in, you will be prompted to do so. If you want to log out, you can do that via the Account link in the banner (note that if Login appears instead of Account it means you are already logged out).

“There were all types of things in here, books on typography, epigraphy, philosophy, political ideologies. Books like Fox’s Book of Martyrs, The Twelve Caesars, Tacitus lectures and letters to Brutus. Pericles’ Idea State of Democracy, Thucydides The Athenian General—a narrative which would give you the chills…There were novels by Gogol and Balzac, Maupassant, Hugo and Dickens. I usually opened up some book to the middle, read a few pages and if I liked it went back to the beginning…I was looking for the part of my education that I never got. ..The books weren't arranged in any particular order or subject matter. Rousseau's Social Contract was next to Temptation of St. Anthony, and Ovid's Metamorphoses, the scary horror tale, was next to the autobiography of Davy Crockett. Endless rows of books...I wanted to read all these books, but I would have to have been in a rest home or something in order to do that…A lot of these books were too big to read, like giant shoes fitted for large-footed people. I read the poetry books, mostly. Byron and Shelley and Longfellow and Poe. I memorized Poe's poem "The Bells" and strummed it to a melody on my guitar…The books make the room vibrate in a nauseating and forceful way.”

— Bob Dylan, Chronicles: Volume One

It’s always hard to get to know folks online—One benefit of joining the Book Club is access to Member Profiles, aimed at helping you get to know the diverse folks who have become part of the Dylan world .