Last weekend, on my weekly pilgrimage to Bunnings, (OK I didn’t really have a hardware or garden need… just a hankering for a charitable sausage on a bit of bread), the fundraising group de jour was The Tough Guy Book Club – a wonderful oxymoron of a name and a much more fun expression of the contemporary need for positive male bonding. I hope there’s a female version out there too.
I wandered over to their web and FaceBook pages and found out some nourishing information. The club is a worldwide organisation of local chapters that meet on the first Wednesday night of every month – usually in a pub. I asked the chap serving snags on bread whether they were like the Peaky Blinders of Books Clubs – and he liked my characterisation – perhaps with less razor gangster action.
But the thing that really got me interested was the list of previously discussed books. It was like a compendium of books I’ve read throughout my adolescence, my university days, mid-life and now senior years. Also – books that are still in my bucket list.
AND … one of the books was … David Ireland’s “The Glass Canoe” – set in the Inner West pub where my late father used to drink … and the spark that prompted me to invent the Pig’s Arms.
See what you think.
Kind regards,
Emm

Great to meet you at our Newtown meeting this week for Tough Guy Book Club. Or as you said at Bunnings, the “Peaky Blinders” of book clubs 😅 It did get rather rowdy, fourteen men drinking beer and talking about a weird 1920s German novel — just the way we like it!
Ahead of the next meeting (Wed 1 Nov), we’re read “Open Water” by Caleb Azumah Nelson (so, yeah, reading often very books from month to month in the Club — also just the way we like it!) 😀
Great work with this Pigs Arms website, too. I’m sure I’ll be directing the guys to this place 🍻
See you again.
Best regards,
Chris D.
Newtown Chapter Pres.
Tough Guy Book Club 💀📚
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I’m pleased to see there are branches of the club in 2 towns a stone’s throw from my town.
What a good idea this was/is. Sort of a Men’s Shed without sharp tools.
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The sharp tools at my local pub, think that puctuation is to shout F*** between every word. This radical idea of reading and conversation is dependent upon the participants.
In my limited experience I could not reciprocate enthusiasm for any of the clubs that would admit me.
Anyroad, I can’t throw stones 100km
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The sharp tools at my local pub, think that puctuation is to shout F*** between every word. This radical idea of reading and conversation is dependent upon the participants.
In my limited experience I could not reciprocate enthusiasm for any of the clubs that would admit me.
Anyroad, I can’t throw stones 100km
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Sorry to hear Norm. But I think the tough guys would encourage you to start your own club. I think that’s how it works.
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A virtual club of one specialising in one-handed reading!
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I thought the same thing, Yvonne.
I’m expecting that the Inner West might have a reasonable number of blokes who are worth the time of day and the local club could provide a very good opportunity to meet some.
The Bunnings guys were a hoot. And the previous book reviews I’ve read have been first class.
I will report back after my first attendance – perhaps Big M might do likewise.
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I look forward to your reports.
I read some of the reviews/reports on the site, and they were excellent.
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Thanks, Emmjay, at last something useful emerges from the mystery bag sizzle at Bunnings.
Have downloaded the current book and calendarised the date of the next meeting!
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Hi Big. I misplaced the bit where they mentioned the current book – what is it ?
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Steppenwolf by Hesse.
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Steppenwolf by Hess.
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Steppenwolf by Hess.
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Thanks, Big. I read it in the ‘70s. Time for a recap.
👍
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