Book Club Discussion Questions
Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!
- The book begins with an older Cork O'Connor looking back on a childhood summer that changed his life. Do you have any similar experience of a pivotal moment when you were growing up that changed you, or an event that made you suddenly feel like more of an adult?
- When Cork first sees Big John's body hanging from the tree, he begins to cry and says, "I'm sorry, Big John. I'm sorry." Why do you think he says that?
- Why don't the people on the reservation trust Liam's conclusion that Big John's death is a suicide? What is the history between the people who live on the reservation and those in law enforcement in Aurora? How does Dilsey, Liam's mother-in-law, try to help connect Liam and the people on the reservation, and why does she get so frustrated with Liam?
- What is Duncan MacDermid's standing in the town? Where do his power and influence come from? Do you have ideas about what might have caused his deep-seated hatred of Native Americans?
- At the funeral for Big John, Cork has some of his first interactions with Henry Meloux. What advice does Henry give him? Do you think it's helpful? How does this establish their friendship and the kind of relationship that Cork will maintain with Henry as an adult and throughout the Cork O'Connor series?
- Liam is used to relying solely on evidence and logic to do his job as sheriff. In this case, people around him are often telling him to approach the case in a different way. What do they want him to consider? Why is it so hard for Liam to open his mind to other possibilities, and yet seemingly so easy for Cork?
- At Lightning Strike, Cork and his friends sense a powerful spirit they believe to be Big John. Do you think this is a trick of the mind or something more? Do you think there's a connection between this experience and Jorge and Cork's fascination with Hollywood monster movies? Have you ever had a similar almost supernatural experience or coincidence happen to you?<
- What are the deeply ingrained beliefs that impact Liam's judgment in the case? He says he only follows the facts of the case, but is it possible to weigh facts without any bias? What motivates him to go back and seek out additional evidence that he might have initially overlooked?
- How does Cork develop over the course of the novel? What events occur that take him from being an innocent child to an adult? What is lost and what is gained as we leave childhood behind?
- Mary Margaret is a more complicated character than she seems at first. How does your understanding of her and her motivations change as you learn more about her life and her marriage to Duncan?
- Why do you think Cork followed in his father's footsteps and became a police officer? Do you have experience yourself or with a friend who followed in a parent's profession? Was it a fulfilling choice?
- In William Kent Krueger's novels, the Minnesota setting becomes almost another character. What are the key settings in this book, and how to they play an important role in shaping the plot? How would this story be different if it were set somewhere else?
- At the start of the novel Cork worships his father, but his understanding of him changes over the course of the novel. Does Cork truly "unravel the mystery that had been his father," as he observes in the prologue?
- Liam tells Father Cam, "We all stumble in the dark, but that's why the Great Mystery gave us voices, so that we can call out, seeking others in that dark... . Alone, the darkness swallows us. But together, we help each other through." Can you think of ways that hearing his father say these words might have informed the way Cork lived his own life?
- After reading the novel, do you agree with the words attributed to Liam in the epilogue: "We don't choose our lives. Our lives choose us"?
Enhance Your Book Club
- Lightning Strike is described as a place of special power. Are there any places like that nearby in your city or town? What history gives them their unusual significance or mysterious nature?
- In Lightning Strike, William Kent Krueger uses references to other books as a way to tell us about his characters. For example, Cork reads and loves Treasure Island, The Time Machine, and The Hound of the Baskervilles. His mother, we're told, will love Gifts from the Sea. Pick another character from the novel and discuss what books (either current or time-appropriate to the novel) they might read and what these choices say about them.
- Read one of William Kent Krueger's other novels that deal with coming of age, such as Ordinary Grace or This Tender Land. How are they similar to the Cork O'Connor mysteries? What elements of setting and detail carry over? How does each novel handle the element of mystery differently? How does Krueger make the experience of a young adult so specific to his characters and yet so universal?
Unless otherwise stated, this discussion guide is reprinted with the permission of Atria Books.
Any page references refer to a USA edition of the book, usually the trade paperback version, and may vary in other editions.