[NFBV-Potomac-Announce] June Book Club

John Halverson jwh100 at outlook.com
Sun Jun 5 16:22:46 UTC 2022


Hello Colleagues and Friends,

Our Potomac Chapter Book Club will meet at 7:00 PM on Wednesday June 8 by Zoom.  The book is Birds in Fall.  A set of questions taken from the end of the book are below.

John

Zoom information.


https://zoom.us/j/8297256345?pwd=SFAyamlQNU44ZTJ6dUZNMTV4RmhCQT09


 Telephone Dial: tel:6468769923
Meeting ID: 829 725 6345

One tap mobile
tel:+16468769923,,8297256345


A Scribner Reading Group Guide
Discussion Points


  1.  The novel begins with a chapter told from Russell's point of view, then switches between the points of view of most of the other characters. How does this narrative structure strengthen the story? How does getting a glimpse of airplane passengers before their crash allow the stories of the victims family members to resonate even more?
  2.  Do you think the novel has a main character? Which of the characters did you relate to the most? Did you wish any of the minor characters played a bigger role?
  3.  The night at the inn when Anna first shares her bed with Pars, she thinks on subzero nights in the north country; kinglets huddled together on branches. Did anyone blame them for sharing their warmth to survive? What did you think of Anna and Pars' relationship? How is Anna's allusion to the kinglets a metaphor for many of the relationships in this novel?
  4.  Food and cooking are recurring motifs throughout the novel. What is the importance of food as a source of strength for the characters? Consider Kevin and Clar Tia's cooking lesson, Pars' story about the chicken heart and the Liangs bowl of fruit. How else is food used as a tool for healing and bringing people together in this novel and in real life?
  5.  When the victims' families go to the ocean for the first time, Pars tells Anna "It's almost offensive how pretty the place is." What does he mean?
  6.  Diane Olmstead reflects that there was something else that accompanied the tragedy, a certain quickening of life she felt with the proximity of so much death. She'd observed this before, how ironically, it took death to make one feel momentarily alive, truly present minute to minute. How is Diana different from the other characters? How does Buddhism allow her to handle death with an open mind? What rituals do the other characters use to deal with death and grief?
  7.  In the scene where Orpheo Rascaloff first plays the piano, Kessler writes "and the others listened and wept, too, openly or to themselves for even though the Bulgarian hadn't spoken to any of them the entire time on the island, it seemed that he was the  most articulate, the most expressive of them all; that heretofore, his silence had meant that more than all their accumulated words combined." Why does music resonate with all the characters in a way that nothing else does? How else do people use music to cope with grief?
  8.  After months of taking care of people in the aftermath of the crash, Kevin is tired, frustrated. "Why all this fuss for people who died so publicly so spectacularly in a flash when there was nothing for the thousands who died so agonizing slow alone, shunned inside their rooms, all the friends in New York City he'd watched die and no one cared. Yet Douglas, who was too young to have experienced those years in New York, needed to talk. What is Kevin referring to in this passage? How does Kevin's past experience as a caretaker for the dying influence his reaction to the plane crash? What are the very different ways Kevin and Douglas respond to the crash?
  9.  One night at the inn, Anna shares stories of bird migration with the other hotel guests. Why is migration such a significant theme in the novel? How do the lives of migratory birds reflect the ups and downs of human life?
  10. The tragedy at the center of this novel draws many people together. What are some of the ways that happiness and hope can arise from tragedy? Has tragedy led to happiness in your life?
  11. What is the significance of the references to Ovid's Metamorphoses to Kingfishers and to Ricard Strauss' Metamorphoses, a Study for 23 Solo Strings? How does the novel's structure support the themes that are central to Birds in Fall?


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