Book Club Discussion Questions
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Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!
Introduction
It seems like mutual good luck for Abigail Taylor and Dara MacLeod when they
meet at university and, despite their differences, become fast friends. Years
later they remain inseparable: Abigail, the actress, allegedly immune to
romance, and Dara, a therapist, throwing herself into relationships with
frightening intensity. Now both believe they've found "true love." But luck
seems to run out when Dara moves into Abigail's downstairs apartment. Suddenly
both their friendship and their relationships are in peril, for tragedy is
waiting to strike the house on Fortune Street.
Questions for Discussion
- Sean is characterized as someone who would rather not revisit
"uncomfortable memories," and, as the anonymous letter says, "see what's
right in front of [his] face." Is this tendency particular to Sean alone, or
do other characters in the book suffer from the same myopia?
- When Cameron takes Dara to the Charles Dodgson exhibit, he is trying to
share something of himself with her. What makes him step back and, once
again, refrain from divulging more of his inner life? Would telling her have
helped Dara?
- Is Dara deluding herself in her belief that Edward will leave his wife?
How do Edward's intentions look through the eyes of other characters?
- What role does coincidence play in the stories of all four characters?
What role does it play in bringing the threads of these stories together?
- Several characters in this book are profoundly affected by a past event,
which they're never able either to come to terms with, or to fully
understand. What is Livesey saying about the nature of childhood memories,
particularly traumatic ones?
- What role do letters play in the novel? What kind of information do they
contain and, in each instance, how do they change the course of the
narrative?
- Each main character in the book has an affinity with a specific literary
figure: Sean with John Keats; Cameron with Charles Dodgson; Dara with
Charlotte Brontë; and Abigail with Charles Dickens. How do these "literary
godparents" complement the reader's understanding of each character and his
or her situation?
- Abigail's story comes last. How does our view of Abigailboth in her
dealings with Sean, and her dealings with Darachange when we see events
play out through her eyes? What part of Abigail's background is most
influential in the formation of her character?
- The story of The House on Fortune Street comes to us, piece by
piece, through the perspectives of four characters. How does the order of
the voices affect your reading of the novel as a whole?
Unless otherwise stated, this discussion guide is reprinted with the permission of Harper Perennial.
Any page references refer to a USA edition of the book, usually the trade paperback version, and may vary in other editions.