Maison Tranquille Book and Movie Club: A Year of Quiet Companionship
January 6, 2026
Maison Tranquille Book and Movie Club: A Year of Quiet Companionship
I am drawn to stories that trust silence. Stories that do not explain themselves too quickly, that allow doubt, endurance, and moral growth to unfold without instruction. This watchlist is not about productivity or entertainment. It is about companionship - films that sit with me, season by season, and ask better questions than they answer.
I’m calling this a book and movie club, though it may very well remain a club of one. Still, if you’re drawn to quiet stories, unhurried watching, and books that sit with you rather than instruct you, you’re welcome here. Come for one month or twelve. Or simply borrow the list and disappear back into your own life.
JANUARY
🎬 Ikiru (1952)
📖 Man’s Search for Meaning — Viktor E. Frankl
Why this pairing:
Both ask what makes a life meaningful when circumstances cannot be changed. Neither sentimentalizes suffering. Both insist that dignity is an interior act.
FEBRUARY
🎬 The Remains of the Day (1993)
📖 The Sense of an Ending — Julian Barnes
Why:
Memory, self-deception, loyalty, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive our own restraint. Quiet, devastating, precise.
MARCH
🎬 The Way (2010)
📖 Pilgrim at Tinker Creek — Annie Dillard
Why:
Walking as transformation. Attention as spiritual practice. Both suggest that movement and noticing can heal what explanation cannot.
APRIL
🎬 Paterson (2016)
📖 The Book of Delights — Ross Gay
Why:
Ordinary days as sufficient. Small joys as discipline. Neither argues for happiness — they practice attention.
MAY
🎬 A Hidden Life (2019)
📖 Silence — Shūsaku Endō
Why:
Conscience under pressure. Faith without reassurance. Moral courage that is lonely, misunderstood, and costly.
JUNE
🎬 The Lunchbox (2013)
📖 84, Charing Cross Road — Helene Hanff
Why:
Lives changed through correspondence. Kindness across distance. Human connection without performance.
JULY
🎬 Babette’s Feast (1987)
📖 Gilead — Marilynne Robinson
Why:
Grace offered freely. Generosity without demand. Beauty that arrives quietly and lingers.
AUGUST
🎬 The Rider (2017)
📖 The Art of Losing — Elizabeth Bishop (or selected poems)
Why:
Identity reshaped by loss. Acceptance without collapse. Strength found in truth rather than recovery.
SEPTEMBER
🎬 Tokyo Story (1953)
📖 Being Mortal — Atul Gawande
Why:
Aging, family, and dignity. Love expressed imperfectly and often too late. Humane, unsentimental, deeply compassionate.
OCTOBER
🎬 The Straight Story (1999)
📖 Crossing to Safety — Wallace Stegner
Why:
Reconciliation, loyalty, and moral steadiness over a lifetime. Slow, patient, and deeply American in its quiet wisdom.
NOVEMBER
🎬 Nomadland (2020)
📖 Braiding Sweetgrass — Robin Wall Kimmerer
Why:
Belonging without ownership. Work, land, impermanence. Gratitude as an ethical stance.
DECEMBER
🎬 Chariots of Fire (1981)
📖 Liturgy of the Ordinary — Tish Harrison Warren
Why:
Discipline as devotion. Daily life as sacred practice. Conviction lived quietly, not announced.
Still Curious. Still Growing, Still Grateful.
by Janis @ Simple Raw and Natural



