Book recommendations. Organizational tools. Whether your club is picking things back up or kicking off a lifetime of literary companionship, Bookclubz is at your service. We’ve listened to your requests and have made a list of the newest and most popular Bookclubz features (with more coming!) to help keep your book club humming along. Peruse below.
Teach me how to Bookclubz! Meet our newest and most popular tech features:
Customize your club settings efficiently and simply - NEW
We moved every key club setting so they’re all👏 in 👏 one 👏 place 👏. That includes notification settings about who’s getting what notifications when, and important privacy settings too.
Head to the polls 🗳️
Our polling feature lets every voice be heard! We’re not just fans of democracy here at Bookclubz. Polls keep your club healthy by asking members to take ownership of it. Start by voting on what book to read and when to meet. You can create polls with yes/no and open-ended responses, so prepare for great debates…
Continue the conversation on our new and improved Message Board đź’¬ - NEW
…which could continue on your message board!
You may have had a final point in discussion, but then you ran out of time. Or someone mentioned that incredible bottle of wine, but then everyone forgot the name. In any case, book club doesn’t have to end when the meeting’s over. (Maybe it never has to end). Our message board is great for sharing photos, favorite quotes and keeping the group on track with their reading. Plus, you can now share gifs and emojis for added fun. And you can categorize your messages (“I was right,” “crucial wine”) so you can easily return to any thread and find what you’re looking for.
Keep Book Club on the Calendar, for good. 🗓️
We get it. Calendars are a second brain that rules our lives too. Hence, when you create a meeting via Bookclubz, a calendar invitation will automatically be sent to your members. You can say goodbye to those frantic “when are we meeting?!” texts.
For readers who crave adventure
- Finding Napoleon by Margaret Rodenberg
- Green Beach File by K.A. Perry
- The Missing Sister by Lucinda Riley
For readers who demand passion
- From Blood and Ash, by Jennifer L. Armentrout
- The Last Tiara, by M.J. Rose
- Queen Move, by Kennedy Ryan
For readers who burn to understand the past
- My Monticello, by Jocelyn Nicole Johnson
- Nickel Boys, by Colson Whitehead
- In All Good Faith, by Liza Nash Taylor
For readers who prefer the contemporary
- Three Rooms, by Jo Hamya
- All Boys Aren’t Blue, by George M. Johnson
- The Archer, by Shruti Swamy
For readers who are in need of a chuckle
- Greenlights, by Matthew McConaughey
- His Only Wife, by Peace Adzo Medie
- Afterparties, by Anthony Veasna So