http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/calendar-activities/oprah-winfrey-launched-book-20722.html
Contribute to ReadWriteThink / RSS / FAQs / Site Demonstrations / Contact Us
![]()
![]()
What’s Happening This Week

There is much more to explore in our calendar. Find other important events in literary history, authors' birthdays, and a variety of holidays, each with related lessons and resources.
![]()

Looking for age-appropriate book recommendations, author interviews, and fun activity ideas? Check out our podcasts.
![]()
Home › Classroom Resources › Calendar Activities
September 16
Oprah Winfrey launched her book club this week in 1996.
![]()
![]()
| Grades | 1 – 12 |
| Calendar Activity Type | Historical Figure & Event |
In September 1996, television personality Oprah Winfrey announced the first selection for her new book club, and her viewers responded by buying millions of copies of Jacquelyn Mitchard's The Deep End of the Ocean. Credited with starting a resurgence in the popularity of reading and book clubs, Winfrey went on to promote books by contemporary authors such as Toni Morrison, Ernest Gaines, and Barbara Kingsolver, as well as classic authors from Tolstoy to Faulkner.
Book clubs promote the social nature of reading and invite students to enjoy reading for its own sake. Even though individual readers might process text successfully in isolation, having the opportunity to discuss responses, share insights, and learn from the interpretations of other readers can be very valuable. Consider trying one of the activities below to get your own version of a book club started in your classroom.
- Within a classroom, have students form groups of three to five. Working with your librarian/school media specialist, have each group choose an appropriate book to read and discuss in place of an independent reading assignment.
- If you're feeling more ambitious, consider collaborating with colleagues on a larger book club model. Take the "One Grade, One Book" approach and have all students in a particular grade level read the same title. Discussion groups from different classes can share their responses at designated times. For middle school and secondary students, consider launching a "One School, One Book" intitiative and unite all the readers in your school around an appropriate title.
See the resources below for tips and suggestions on getting book clubs (large or small) started in your classroom or school.
- Tips on Starting a Book Group
This site provides questions that can help groups make basic decisions about what their group will do. Edit this site's list of questions to customize it for the specific needs of your students or group.
- Starting a Book Club
Kidsreads provides tips and suggestions on starting and running a book club, including information on when and where to meet, what to bring, and who should lead discussion, as well as advice on choosing what to read.
- Breakfast Book Club: Feeding Bodies and Minds
This Education World online article shares experiences from three schools that began book clubs to nurture their students' love of reading. The article includes book recommendations and links to other programs and resources.
- Starting a Book Club in a Mid-sized Public Library: A Practical Guide
Although this online article focuses on an adult audience at a library (not students at a school), it provides honest and practical advice for starting a larger-scale book club project.
Grades 3 – 5 | Lesson Plan | Recurring Lesson
This lesson describes how small groups of students can plan meetings to discuss what they've read in a "just for fun" book club they've organizedand that they control.
Grades 6 – 8 | Lesson Plan | Recurring Lesson
Girls Read: Online Literature Circles
In this lesson designed especially for girls, students read a work of realistic fiction and get to know strong female protagonists through online literary circles and writing activities.
Grades 9 – 12 | Lesson Plan | Unit
Short Story Fair: Responding to Short Stories in Multiple Media and Genres
In this activity, students read short stories and create presentations in multiple media to share in a Short Story Fair. At the fair, students explore and respond to the displays.
Grades K – 2 | Lesson Plan | Recurring Lesson
Literature Circles with Primary Students Using Self-Selected Reading
Students respond to self-selected books in journals, and talk about their books daily in small groups. The teacher guides students by offering suggestions and writing with them in dialogue journals.
![]()

