Bring a Book Group to Your Community

Book Group programs are awarded to organizations and communities all across Maine. It is the aim of Maine Humanities to maximize the impact of our programming. Organizations or groups led by and/or serving communities traditionally under-resourced in the humanities are encouraged to apply.

Successful applications:

  • Articulate clear goals for the program
  • Explain why a Book Group is a good fit for their community
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the mechanics of gathering and running a group and the capacity to do this work. 

Eligibility

  • An organization or group may only be awarded a Maine Humanities Book Group once a year. 
  • Maine Humanities cannot support programs looking to start outside the timeframe outlined for the current application round. 
  • Maine Humanities cannot support programs that:
    • engage in advocacy or discriminate against persons or groups; 
    • promote a particular political, religious, or ideological point of view; 
    • support specific policies or legislation
  • Organizations or groups with no connection to Maine are not eligible to apply.

Book List

What will you read?

Filter by:

Type
Program
Topic

fiction

A Council of Dolls

Mona Susan Power

The stories of three generations of Yanktonai Dakota women from the 19th century to the present day are told in part through the dolls they carry. Explore the effects of settler colonialism, the damage of Indian boarding schools, and the historical massacres of Indigenous people. Consider how strength, healing, and love can reverberate through generations providing hope and resiliency

picture book

Abuelita and Me

Leonarda Carranza, Illustrated by Rafael Mayani

On the bus and at the grocery store, people are impatient and suspicious—sometimes they even yell. Sad, angry, and scared, the story’s young narrator decides not to leave home again…until a moment of empowerment helps her see the strength she and Abuelita share when they face the world together.

nonfiction

American Breakdown

Jennifer Lunden

This wide-ranging, genre-crossing literary mystery interweaves the author’s quest to understand her mystery medical condition with the story of the chronically ill 19th-century diarist Alice James—ultimately uncovering the many hidden health hazards of life in America. How we are a nation struggling—and failing—to be healthy?

fiction

Empire of Wild

Cherie Dimaline

Inspired by the traditional story of the Rogarou, known in Métis culture as a shapeshifter, this literary thriller follows Joan, a Métis woman, as she looks for her missing husband. After a year of searching, she meets a suspicious preacher and narrows her focus.

nonfiction

Feeding Ghosts: A Graphic Memoir

Tessa Hulls

In 1947 Sun Yi, a Shanghai journalist, becomes a target after Communist victory. Years later, her daughter Rose brings her to live with her in the United States. Tessa grows up watching them struggle under the weight of unexamined trauma and mental illness. With Chinese history as the backdrop, this graphic memoir explores love, grief, exile, and identity across generations.

picture book

Fighting for YES!

Maryann Cocca-Leffler, Illustrated by Vivien Mildenberger

Hearing “NO!” for much of her life, disability-rights activist, Judy Heumann played a significant role in the passage of Section 504 of Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Along with a personal reflection from Judy herself, this biography captures the impact and influence of one of America’s greatest activists.

young adult

Give Me a Sign

Anna Sortino

Lilah feels stuck in the middle- she doesn’t feel “deaf enough” to identify as Deaf or hearing enough to meet the world’s expectations. She becomes a summer counselor at a camp for the deaf and blind and finds community in this revelatory exploration of Deaf culture, its vastness, and its beautiful complexities.

picture book

I’m An American

Darshana Khiani, Illustrated by Laura Freeman

Students explore the concept of Americanness as they each share bits of their family history and how their past has shaped their own personal American experience. Whether as new immigrants, or those whose family came to this country generations ago, or other scenarios, their stories show some of the broad range of cultures and values that form the history and identity of our nation.

picture book

In My Mosque

M.O. Yuksel, Illustrated by Hatem Aly

Everyone is welcome here. From grandmothers reading lines of the Qur’an and the imam telling stories of living as one, to meeting new friends and learning to help others, mosques are centers for friendship, community, and love. Celebrate the joys and traditions found in every mosque around the world.

poetry

Into the Hush

Arthur Sze

U.S. Poet Laureate Arthur Sze’s twelfth book of poetry addresses the challenges of our nuclear age that language that ripples and stills, widens and deepens. Sze harnesses a range of innovative forms to respond to the challenges of climate change, exploring what it means to live on an endangered planet.

poetry

It Rains Diamonds on Neptune

Various

The Telling Room’s 20th Anniversary Anthology pairs the voices of youth with those of established Maine authors. Powerful stories, poems, essays, and recipes touch on pressing topics impacting youth today, from climate change, LGBTQ+ identity, gun violence, and racism; to finding community, cultural connections, humor, and hope in unexpected places.

picture book

Lucy! How Lucille Ball Did it All

Amy Guglielmo and Jacqueline Tourville, Illustrated by Brigette Barrager

As a child, Lucy was sassy, bold, and funny. As an adult, she was a rule-breaking, chance-taking, comedy pioneer. In 1951, I Love Lucy took television by storm, and has made millions laugh ever since. Lucy! is the true story of how Lucille Ball overcame the odds to become the world’s Queen of Comedy.

young adult

Lunar New Year Love Story

Gene Luen Yang, Illustrated by LeUyen Pham

Valentina struggles with the truth behind why she’s being raised by a single father and a family curse. For Jae, lion dancing is the only thing giving him peace since his dad died. Jae passes Val a paper heart at the Lunar New Year festival, eventually changing their lives.

poetry

Midden

Julia Bouwsma

Midden confronts the events and over one hundred years of silence that surround the history of Malaga Island. Utilizing a wide range of poetic styles, Midden delves into the vital connections between land, identity, and narrative and asks how we can heal the generations and legacies of damage.

young adult

Monster Locker

Jorge Aguirre, Illustrated by Andrés Vera Martínez

Something in the basement of sixth-grader Pablo Ortiz’s school has waited hundreds of years for its chance to open a portal into the realm of monsters. When Pablo accidentally breaks the seal and summons a vengeful Aztec goddess, his new friends and the wisdom passed down by his abuela help him take her on.

fiction

Murder on the Red River

Marcie R. Rendon

After growing up in the broken foster care system, 19-year-old Ojibwe woman. Renee “Cash” Blackbear, is fiercely independent. When a murder rocks her Red River Valley community, she uses her visions and grit to help the sheriff unravel the truth amidst racism and oppression.

nonfiction

Polar Vortex: A Family Memoir

Denise Dorrance

When she suddenly must care for her dementia-impaired mother, Denise leaves London for her hometown in Iowa. As her mother, hospitalized with the insurance running out, experiences the swirling confusion of dementia, Denise wrestles with her new role as caregiver, childhood memories and a toxic relationship with her sister.

young adult

Rez Ball

Byron Graves

Tre is happiest when playing basketball on the Red Lake Reservation high school team. But stepping into his late brother’s shoes as a star player means that Tre can’t mess up on the court, at school, and with friends. Can he play like the hero his Ojibwe community needs him to be?

picture book

Rostam’s Picture-Day Pusteen

Ryan Bani Tahmaseb, Illustrated by Fateme Mokhles

Being the new kid is hard. And wearing something that might seem odd to other kids is even harder. Rostam and Maman recently moved to the United States. Baba is still working in Iran. As picture day approaches, Rostam worries his classmates will think wearing his pusteen is weird.

picture book

That Flag

Tameka Fryer Brown, Illustrated by Nikkolas Smith

Best friends Bianca and Keira are inseparable at school. But Keira questions their friendship after learning more about the meaning of the Confederate flag hanging from Bianca’s front porch. Will the two friends be able to overlook their distinct understandings of the flag or will they reckon with the flag’s effect on yesterday and today?

fiction

The Berry Pickers

Amanda Peters

Every summer a Mi’kmaq family from Nova Scotia travels to Maine to rake blueberries. One year the youngest daughter, Ruthie, goes missing. Nearby, Norma struggles to find a sense of identity, as the origins of her birth parents remain unknown. What follows is an “exquisitely moving story of unrelenting hope, unwavering love, and the power of family – even in the face of grief and betrayal.”

fiction

The Great Transition

Nick Fuller Googins

Wildfires, rising oceans, mass migration, and skyrocketing inequality have become the daily reality. A movement of workers, migrants, and refugees inspires the world to band together, save the planet, and rebuild a society for all. Learning this global and family history is critical as Emi courageously searches for her mother.

nonfiction

The Hidden Life of Trees: A Graphic Adaption

Peter Wholleben and Fred Bernard, Illustrated by Benjamin Flao

Along with poignant memories of the author’s life, this graphic adaptation of Peter Wohlleben’s international bestseller offers scientific insights and pearls of wisdom gained from Peter’s decades of observing forests, including how trees impact weather and climate, how they communicate with each other, and how they interact with fungal networks deep within the ground.

fiction

The Only Good Indians

Stephen Graham Jones

Four men from the Blackfeet Nation find themselves in a desperate struggle for their lives against an entity wanting to exact revenge for their dishonorable actions during an elk hunt ten years earlier. What is the cost of breaking from culture and tradition?

fiction

The Seed Keeper

Diane Wilson

Follow a Dakhóta family’s struggle to preserve their way of life, and their sacrifices to protect what matters most. Explore the strength that women, land, and plants have shared with one another throughout generations and how they can continue to reclaim the past by reconnecting with ancient purpose.

young adult

Where You See Yourself

Claire Forrest

Finding a college that will be the perfect fit and be accessible enough for Effie to navigate in her wheelchair presents a ton of considerations that her friends don’t worry about. Through admissions visits, senior class traditions, internal and external ableism, and more, she learns that growing up can mean being open to a world of new possibilities.

young adult

Wishing Season

Anica Mrose Rissi

After her twin brother Anders dies, Lily must move through her grief and learn how to navigate a world that continues to move forward despite this loss. But she has a secret so extraordinary, so magical, no one would believe that it’s true.

young adult

Wishing Upon the Same Stars

Jacquetta Nammar Feldman

Yasmeen, a Palestinian American girl moves to San Antonio with her family and meets her neighbor, a first-generation Israeli American. As Yasmeen begins to develop her own understandings of home, heritage, and herself, can the two girls learn there’s more that brings them together than might tear them apart and that peace begins with them?

young adult

Yusuf Azeem is Not a Hero

Saadia Faruqi

Yusuf Azeem has long awaited the chance to participate in the regional robotics competition. But this year is the twentieth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, an anniversary that has everyone in his Muslim community on edge. Can he hold onto his joy—and his friendships—in the face of heartache and prejudice?

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Common Questions

What if I don't know what to read?

If you are having a hard time choosing from our Book List, you can let us know in your application. A Maine Humanities Program Coordinator can work with you to select titles from this list.

 

Can we use books that aren’t on the Book List?

Yes, you can use books that are not on our Book List, but we hope you will keep oubook philosophy in mind when choosing titles for your group.

The books in a Maine Humanities Book Group serve as a reliable common starting point for discussion, not as a guide or authority on a specific issue.

  • The best Book Group books are those that offer lots of perspectives on the subjective experience of being alive.
  • Fiction, poetry, and memoir do this really well. They tend to complexify a topic or issue, make space for many different interpretations, and foster readers’ agency in coming to their own understanding.
  • Reading more doesn’t necessarily mean deeper discussions: often one book is enough for several sessions.

Please note that any book choices not from our Book List need to be included in your application. If you’d like to talk about choosing books before you apply, please reach out to info@mainehumanities.org.

 

I work at/with a library and want to use a Maine State Library Book Kit ... can I apply?

Yes, groups that are using a MSL Book Kit can use the Book Group application to request a Maine Humanities Facilitator and other kinds of support from Maine Humanities. Let us know in the application what series you want to use and whether you have already requested a Book Kit.  

If you are applying in support of a regularly scheduled library book group, please note that we’ll have better success pairing you with a facilitator if your group is able to be flexible about meeting times for the duration of your Maine Humanities Book Group.

 

Do we have to use a Maine Humanities Facilitator?

Yes, all Maine Humanities Book Groups are facilitated by someone from our facilitator roster. Groups that are looking to use their own facilitator are not eligible to apply. 

 

What if I am a Maine Humanities facilitator? Can I apply?

Yes, Maine Humanities Facilitators are eligible to apply to host their own groups. Serving as both the host and the facilitator means that you would be responsible for completing the obligations of the Book Group Point Person such as participant recruitment, attendance keeping, and completing all final paperwork. (Full Point Person responsibilities are outlined on the last page of the application.) It can be helpful to partner with an organization in your area (or area of interest) who can help share this work. 

 

I’m not affiliated with a specific organization or group...can I apply?

Yes, individuals are eligible to apply as long as they are able to complete the obligations of the Book Group Point Person, such as participant recruitment, attendance keeping, and completing all final paperwork. (Full Point Person responsibilities are outlined on the last page of the application.) It can be helpful to partner with an organization in your area (or area of interest) who can help share this work. 

 

Can I save the application?

Yes, you can save your application and come back to it later by clicking the “Save and Resume Later” bar at the bottom of any page. When you do, you will see a pop-up message with a unique link to use when you (or a colleague) want to resume work. 

PLEASE NOTE: 

  • This link is the only way to access your saved application. 
  • The link will not be emailed to you automatically – you must request to have the link emailed to you. 
  • Every time you click “Save and Resume Later” you will be given a NEW link to access your application. 
  • Each link is good for 30 days. 
  • We are not able to access applications that are in process. 

 

ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS

The upcoming round of applications can support Book Groups starting between November 1, 2026 and April 1, 2027.

Applications open and close at noon on the above dates.

Think through these things before you apply:

  • Why do you want to host a Book Group? 

  • Why is a Book Group important for your community now? 

  • Who are you hoping to gather? 

  • How will you invite people to your group?

  • Who will take care of the logistics, like registrations and attendance?