Friday, December 23, 2022

The Thirteenth Tale, by Diane Setterfield

 

Characters

Vida’s Story

Vida Winter

George and Mathilde Angelfield – grandparents

Isabelle – twin’s mother

Charlie – Vida’s father

Emmeline and Adeline – twins

 

Ambrose Parker – Aurelius’ father?

 

“Missus” – Mrs. Dunne

 

John-the-dig

 

Dr. and Mrs. Maudsley

 

Hester Borrow – governess

 

Margaret Lea – biographer

Lea’s Antiquarian Booksellers

Father

Mother

Moira – Margaret’s twin, died at birth

Aurelius Alphonse Love – Emmeline’s son

Mrs. Love – raised Aurelius

 

Karen – takes care of deer on estate, Ambrose Parker’s daughter, Aurelius half-sister

Two children

 

Mr.  Lomax – family lawyer

 

Judith – Vida’s housekeeper

 

Dr. Clifton – Vida’s current doctor

 

For Discussion:

NOTE: Page numbers are from hardback edition.

1.       When did you start to suspect there were three girls living in the house?

2.       Who was the twin’s father?  See page 351: “Two girls with nothing of their mother’s husband about them.  Cooper hair – just like their uncle.  Green eyes – just like their uncle.”

3.       As a test, Vida told Margaret a story about a man burning all the existing copies of classic books and asked her if she would shoot the man at the controls to make him stop.  What was the point of this story and question?

4.       What did you think about the experiment by Hester and Dr. Maudsley of separating the twins? 

5.       Discuss Emmeline and Adeline.  Why do you think they developed such opposite personalities.  Hester and Dr. Maudsley’s theory was that the twins “divided the range of emotions and behaviors into two and taken one set each” (page 179).

6.       There were two main stories – Margaret’s narrative of the interviews and Vida’s story of her life – as well as two others, Mrs. Love’s and Hester’s diary.  Were you able to keep everything straight and understand when the narration changed?

7.       In the middle of their series of interviews, why did Vida change and start to tell her story in the first person, using the word “I” (page 205)?

8.       Why did Adeline try to kill Emmeline’s baby?  Do you think she meant to burn down the house and kill herself?

9.       There were many references to reading and books throughout the novel.  Did this add to your enjoyment?  Which one did you particularly relate to?

a.       “Do you know the feeling when you start reading a new book before the membrane of the last one has had time to close behind you?” (page 289)

b.       “And for me, what better way to get to know someone than through her choice and treatment of books?” (page 41)

c.       Pacing yourself when you know the end of the book is approaching: “my thumb and right index finger were sending me a message: Not many pages left.   The knowledge nagged more insistently until I tilted the book to check.  It was true.” (page 27)

d.       “There is something about words.  In expert hands, manipulated deftly, they take you prisoner.” (page 8)

e.       “I read old novels.  The reason is simple: I prefer proper endings.” (page 29)

f.        When Margaret was ill, Dr. Clifton told her she was “suffering from an ailment that afflicts ladies of romantic imagination” (page 302) and prescribed “Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes” (page 303). Do you think this would work?

10.   Vida said her books were popular “because they have a beginning, a middle and an end.  In the right order…it is having them in the right order that matters” (page 51).  Do you agree?  Have you read any books where this was not true and you still enjoyed them?

11.   Did this book have a satisfying beginning, middle, and end?

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