Dune by Frank Herbert at Rockaway Brewing

This week the intergalactic Spice Guild let the Drunk Guys Book Club visit The Rockaway Brewing Company‘s tap room in Long Island City, Queens to record our episode on Frank Herbert’s Dune.  Who should read this book?  Is it fantasy or science fiction?  How many Spice Girls references can there be in one episode?  Find out and more!

We sampled every Rockaway Brewing Company beer they had, including Original ESB, Nitro Black Gold, Rockaway IPA, 1875, Da Beach, M Bell, Let’s Rock, Cream Ale, and Bungalow Nights.

Thank you to Evan and everyone at Rockaway for hosting us!

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week when we read Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Also, check out the Top Five Fantasy Books and Series for Book Clubs. Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

 

Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret by Judy Blume

This week, The Drunk Guys Book Club gets in touch with their feminine sides reading Judy Blume’s Are You There God?  It’s me, Margaret.  While drinking a variety of beers from Evil Twin, HebrewFinback, Pipeworks, and Ninkasi, we discuss getting our periods, why 30-year-old dudes would read this book, and that fucking bitch Nancy.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week when we read Frank Herbert’s Dune while sampling beer from Rockaway Brewing Company.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Also, check out the Top Five Fantasy Books and Series for Book Clubs. Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

The Top Five Fantasy Books and Series for a Book Club – The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast

1. The Harry Potter Series by J.K. Rowling

Sure, they were largely written for a young audience.  Sure, everyone already knows what they’re about.  Sure, you’ve probably already read them.  But all of these factors make the Harry Potter series a solid pick for a book club.  The point of a book club is to have a fun discussion and maybe pair some beers in there to liven it up.  There’s plenty to discuss in Harry Potter.  The allusions to other fantasy works (some of which also make our list), the oblique commentary on English life, and the nerdy etymological tidbits are some of the aspects you can get lost in conversation over.  There’s also the fact that Hogwarts is probably the most dangerous school on earth.  And the confounding wizard law system leaves much to be discussed in an over-excited way.

Despite the intimidating length of the later entries in the series, these books are fast and fun reads.  The stories are easy to get into and the world Rowling created is pretty amazing in its richness.  You don’t have to do all seven books (fuck you, Cursed Child) in a row.  The main points are quickly reviewed at the start of each book.  They make a nice way to break up reading denser, more intense, or more serious books.  Since the whole series is now out, there’s no need to wait for the next release should you find yourself really engrossed (hurry the fuck up, George RR Martin).  The Drunk Guys have been working our way through the series, taking on a book every few months.  Check out our progress here.

If you can’t find butterbeer to drink while you read, try Warlock by Southern Tier, Bloodline by Flying Dog, or Back in Black by 21st Amendment.

2. The Lord of the Rings / The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien

Ask any fantasy reader (nerd) what is the most important and influential series and they’ll tell you Lord of the Rings.  They’ll also tell you that they prefer to not have a girlfriend, though, so don’t trust them on everything.  In all seriousness, Tolkien set the bar for high fantasy.  Sure, there were fantasy writers before, but how many people have actually read anything by Lord Dunsany?  Tolkien virtually created the genre as we understand it now.  Anything that is vaguely about medieval castles, dragons, stuff with magic, dwarves, or really hot elf chicks has its literary roots in Tolkien.

You can cheat and watch the acclaimed Lord of the Rings films or the not-acclaimed Hobbit films. But, there are some changes.

Fortify your epic reading quest with Mikkeller Beer Geek Breakfast, or Founders Canadian Breakfast Stout for second breakfast.

Check out our episode on The Hobbit here.

3. American Gods by Neil Gaiman

This is one of the more famous, acclaimed and generally bad ass fantasy novels to come out in the last two decades.  Like Harry Potter, this one is set in the present day but incorporates mythology cultures all over the world.  Cool things to discuss:  How much are we still influenced by our myths and stories even in the modern day?  What do we lose when we forget them?  Should we work more to remember them?

Or, you can forget all about myths and stories by getting really drunk on mead.  If mead isn’t your thing (because you’re not a viking), try Norse Mythology by Sam Adams or Arrogant Bastard by Stone Brewing.

Check out our episode on American Gods here.

4. A Song of Ice and Fire series by George R.R. Martin

Since everyone (except Mike) has already read these and seen the show, there’s not much needed here in terms of introduction.  They’re great to discuss for many reasons.  First, George R.R. Martin set out to write his own version of the fantasy epic with the same common themes, but by breaking fantasy tropes and turning them upside down.  Killing off the main characters, for example.  There’s tons of hints and foreshadowing and the details are very important.  Great for discussion.  Also, since the last few books aren’t out yet there’s plenty of nerdy discussion to be had trying to guess what is going to happen next or at the end.  Be the one who drinks and knows things at your next Game of Thrones watch party.

One challenge here is that all of the books are not out yet and Martin seems to be in no rush to get the remaining volumes published.  Hopefully he finishes them before his watch has ended.

Because beer cuts deeper than swords, drink a nice Dornish Red or Arbor Gold while you read.  If you can’t find those, there are some licensed Game of Thrones beers from Ommegang to try.  But stock up, these are really long books.  When you read A Game of Thrones, you drink or you die.  Valar Beerghulis (every man must drink).   Beer is Coming.  Ok, I’ll stop now.

5. The Bible

Pick any translation you want, this is probably the most influential fantasy book ever written.  The world building is intense and the cast of characters is immense.  You’ll need to take careful notes to keep track of the various tribes of Israel as they are shunted from forsaken place to promised land and back several times over.  The battle sequences are a bit dated, mostly summarizing the smiting instead of showing the gory details, but there’s plenty of male genital mutilation, slavery, and talking inflamed shrubberies to make up for it.

The main character is God, an all-powerful, all-knowing and yet perennially disappointed egomaniac.  He was the one character I really had a hard time identifying with, but the other characters are very rich and interesting. There’s the sell-out Judas, the drunkard Noah, a woman who becomes an architectural condiment, a dude who is all powerful while rocking a proto-mullet, and an unabashed hippie in Jesus, just to name a few.

Sure, there have been other fantasy books since, and many have improved on virtually all aspects of The Bible, but this one did it first.  If you ignore The Epic of Gilgamesh.  Hardcore fans will want to check out The Dead Sea Scrolls, what we call The Silmarillion of this series.  Also the unofficial sequel The Koran.   Oh, and the alternative history The Book of Mormon version is wild too.  Maybe a bit too crazy for us, though, unless drunk.

As beer apostles we recommend: The Blood of Christ, anything from Hebrew, Original Sin hard cider, and Sweet Baby Jesus from EvilTwin.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

Moby Dick by Herman Melville at Finback Brewery

This week, the Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast takes their first voyage out of drunk Mike’s basement to Finback Brewery in Queens to drink and discuss Moby Dick by Herman Melville.  Is this the greatest work of American Literature?  Should anyone even read it? Why are there so many chapters about whale anatomy?

In this whale of an episode the Drunk Guys sample 14 delicious beers from Finback including:  Summer Somewhere Hefeweizen, Swank Triple IPA, Oscillation 012 Double IPA, Nave Nave Mahana Imperial Stout, Harambe Imperial Stout (RIP), Starchild Sour Ale, Fly On IPA, Hand it Over IPA, Beachcomb-Over Sour Ale, DDH Chromoscope IPA, Spirit of the Dead Watching Imperial Stout, DDH Moss Double IPA, Telephone Lines Pilsner and Smooth Beats Miami Coconut IPA.  Thank you to Erik and everyone at Finback.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week when we visit Mikkeller Brewery at Citi Field, Queens and discuss Shoeless Joe (Field of Dreams) by WP Kinsella.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee (Pulitzer Prize 1961)

For Episode 41 of the Drunk Guy Book Club Podcast, the Drunk Guys ponder Harper Lee’s perennial prize-winning classic, To Kill a Mockingbird.  Is this book still worth reading? Is there a book more widely read?  How can this book get you out of Jury Duty? Find out, and more!  The drunk guys also ponder White Rascal by Avery, Yellow Belly by Omnipollo, Old Engine Oil by Harviestoun, Black by Mikkeller, and Where You Stand by Bronx Brewery.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week as we read Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

 

 

Lord of the Flies by William Golding

In episode 38 of the Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast, the Drunk Guys get deserted with only a fine selection of beers to keep them safe from the beastie as they discuss William Golding’s classic The Lord of the Flies.  While discussing why this is a popular book for high schoolers, how realistic the plot is, and things to do with a conch, we drink some choice beers including Butternuts War Dance and Pork Slap, Eviltwin Lost Souls and  Evil Twin It’s like I’m having the most beautiful IPA and the most terrible nightmare at onceRadiant Pig Junior IPA, Stillwater Nu-tropic, Decadent Ales Double Toasted Marshmallow.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week as we read Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck

In Episode 36 of the Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast, the Drunk Guys drink themselves into and out of a depression while reading John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath.  While following the trials and tribulations of the Joad family, we drink enough beers to forget about the banks foreclosing on your farm, including Dogfish Head Noble Rot, Fulton Sweet Child of Vine,  Barrier Brewing Co. Non-Cents, Barrier Brewing Co. Money IPA, Graft Wild Woods’ Grim Wilderness Vol 1, Boulevard Brewing’s Collaboration 7, and Cuvee Freddy by Brouwerij Alvinne.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week as we read Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

The Giver by Lois Lowry

In Episode 33 of the Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast, the Drunk Guys give it their best shot for The Giver by Lois Lowry.  We also give a bunch of color-themed beers a try including Purple Haze, Double Red, Choklate Oranj, Delirium Red, and Velvets are Blue.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week as we read A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien

In Episode 32 of the Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast, the Drunk Guys go on an epic drinking quest to reclaim some dragon-pilfered Dwarven gold while reading The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien.  As we meander through Middle Earth, we’ll discuss the important issues like how many breakfasts is enough, how bad an adventurer every character in the book is, and why magic is dumb.

Our quest was lubricated by an epic amount of beverages including Mikkeller Beer Geek Breakfast, Founders CBS, Two Roads Espressway, Evil Twin Imperial Biscotti Break, Old Wayfarer Oaked Amber Mead, Evil Twin Imperial Mexican Biscotti Cake Break

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week as we read The Giver by Lois Lowry.

Looking for other fantasy books to read?  Check out our picks for the top fantasy books and series for a book club.

It’s not too late to join our reading challenge – for help read how to read 100 books a year.  Maybe consider some sci-fi books and Drunk Guy approved discussion questions.

A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole (Pulitzer Prize 1981)

In Episode 28 of the Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast we read John Kennedy Toole’s A Confederacy of Dunces.  While discussing the highlights and history of this acclaimed farce, we drink a foolish amount of beers including Lagunitas Hop Stoopid, Abita’s Big Easy IPA, Flying Dog’s Family Drama, Weyerbacher’s Blithering Idiot, and Grey Sail’s Pour Judgement.

The Drunk Guys Book Club Podcast can be found on on iTunes, Google PlayStitcher, PlayerFM and where ever fine podcasts can be found.  If you’re drunk enough to enjoy the Podcast, please give us a rating. To save time, just round up to five stars.  Also, please follow us on TwitterInstagramFacebook, YouTube, and Pinterest.  There’s no excuse to miss another Drunk Guys episode, announcement, or typo!

Join us next week when we read The Alienist by Caleb Carr.

Also, check out our articles about science fiction book club discussion questions  and how to read 100 books a year.  Look for an update on our progress next week!

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