Book Club Discussion Questions
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Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!
- Such delicacy and compassion, or is she a very special case? What do the
younger students' comments reveal about them?
- The act of telling or writing one's story is usually thought of as
therapeutic. What is the cost of Sister Ursula's compulsion to write her story?
Given what she learns in the process, how do you imagine she will respond to
this new knowledge?
- The critic Diane
Roberts noted, "Russo is a master of the small moment as nuclear explosion, the
life-changing turn of the screw" (Houston Chronicle). In which stories
are such moments of insight particularly powerful?
- In several of these
stories, husbands and wives are seriously at odds, and children are caught
between feuding parents, or parents have to intervene for troubled children. Is
Russo's view of family lifeor married lifeparticularly bleak, or scrupulously
realistic?
- What is the effect of the collection as a whole, given the order, pacing,
and content of the stories? What view of life does it project?
- What do the two stories told from a child's perspective have in common?
How does Russo show himself to be a compassionate observer of children's
troubles?
Unless otherwise stated, this discussion guide is reprinted with the permission of Vintage.
Any page references refer to a USA edition of the book, usually the trade paperback version, and may vary in other editions.