Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Tom Lake, by Ann Patchett

 

Characters

Nelson family

Our Town – by Thornton Wilder

Lara Kenison Nelson

Joe – husband

Emily – oldest daughter, future farmer

Massie – middle, future veterinarian

Nell – youngest, actress

 

Farm – grew cherries “stone fruit”

 

Hazel – dog

 

Masie and Ken – Joe’s aunt and uncle

 

Benny Holzapetel – Emily’s boyfriend/fiancĂ©

Characters:

Stage Manager

Emily Webb

Mr. and Mrs. Webb

Wally Webb

George Gibbs

Doc and Mrs. Gibbs

 

 

Others

Productions at Tom Lake

Sebastian Duke – Peter’s brother, teacher, tennis player and coach

 

Singularity – movie featuring Lara

 

Bill Ripley – movie director

Our Town

Peter Duke – Editor Webb

Lara – Emily – third time playing part

Albert Long “Uncle Wallace” – Stage Manager (11th production)

 

Joe Nelson – director, understudy for Stage Manager, left after play started

 

Pallace – understudy for Emily

 

Fool for Love

Pallace and Peter Duke

 

NOTE: Page numbers are from the 2023 hardback edition.

1.       Did you have any trouble following the time line?  It took me awhile to figure out that the italicized print was a signal to the reader that the time had changed.

2.       Discuss the various characters.  Which did you like or not like?  What did you think of Peter Duke as a person, as an actor?

3.       Why was Emily so sure that Peter Duke was her father?

4.       Were you surprised at the ending when Duke wanted to be buried at the Nelson’s farm and that he had paid Joe’s aunt and uncle a considerable sum of money to buy the plot?

5.       Did the passage on page 119 about play rehearsals give you any insight into how much work goes into a production?  For example, Lara narrated “We spent hours in a dark theater, saying the same things to the same people again and again, finding ways to make the world new.”

 

6.       The author referenced Moby Dick twice.  Benny loaned his copy to Nell (page 99) and Lara read the book to her grandmother when she could no longer see well enough to read on her own (page 268).  Also, Nell references Herman Melville’s short story Bartleby the Scrivener when someone closed a door in another’s face (page 185).  Why did the author reference Melville and his work three times?

7.       When Lara is telling the girls the family story again, she thinks “Parts of this story they already know, and this is one of them.  The stories that are familiar will always be our favorites” (page 157).  Does your family have any favorite stories they tell over and over?  Does this relate to what we read – do we sometimes like cozy mysteries because we know in the end all will turn out to be fine?

8.       Lara and Joe did not tell their three girls about their earlier lives until they were grown, and Lara still kept a secret from Joe and the girls.  Do you think it is common for parents to have previous secret lives and not share with their families?

9.       How important was knowledge about Our Town to the reader’s appreciation of the novel?

10.   Would you recommend this book to a friend?  Why or why not?

We Begin at the End, by Chris Whitaker

 

Characters

Radley family:

Star – mother

Duchess

Robin

Sissy – Star’s sister, killed by driver as a young child 30 years ago

 

Vincent King – driver who hit Sissy, Duchess and Robin’s father, in prison

 

Chief Walker “Walk”

 

Hal – Duchess and Robin’s grandfather

 

Dickie Darke – developer

Madeline – daughter, in private health care facility, no hope of leaving

 

Milton – butcher, lived across the street from Star and family, spied on Star, drowned

 

Brandon Rock – neighborhood watch, lived on street with Star and Milton, pushed Milton out of the boat as a joke

 

Martha May – Star’s friend in school, lawyer in Bitterwater, family law

 

Cuddy – prison warden

 

Dolly – sat with Duchess in church

 

Thomas Noble – in Duchess’ class, crippled hand

 

Peter and Lucy Layton – adopted Robin, only wanted one child so did not adopt Duchess

 

 

NOTE: Page numbers are from the 2020 paperback edition.

1.      Did you understand Vincent – in prison he confessed to killing a fellow prisoner in a fight when he could have called it self-defense?  In the second trial he did not want to just plead guilty and get life in prison, he wanted to go to trial and maybe get the death penalty.

2.      How did you think the accident killing Sissy occurred?  Was the sentence unusually hard for a 15-year-old?  At the trial, it said that Walk “offered up the kind of unabridged truth that sealed his friend’s fate” (page 22).  What did he say?

3.      As you read, particularly pages 82 – 83 where Walk found Vincent sitting in chair beside Star’s body, what did you think happened to Star?

4.      Did you understand Duchess’ reaction to Hal and to moving in with him?  Was there anything Hal or anyone could do to make the move easier for her?

5.      Why did Duchess insist on wearing the new dress that she ripped and cut?

6.      Do you think Duchess will ever eventually reconnect with Robin?  Did she make the best choice to let him be adopted without her? 

7.      Do you think Robin will ever remember what happened with his mother?   Should someone have helped him remember as opposed to risking him remembering later on his own?

8.      Who did you think shot Hal?  When she was approaching the porch, Duchess noticed big footprints in the snow.

9.      After Duchess burnt down the bar she threw away the security tape in a garbage bag in a random bunch of garbage (page 70).   Then at the end on pages 345-346 Walk found the tape in a storage locker owned by Darke but among items owned by Dee Lane.  How was this possible?

10.  In the end Darke confessed to Walke that he shot Hal.  Then Walke shot Darke at his request because he could not get insurance for the club without the security tape and was unable to pay for Madeline’s care.  If dead she would get his life insurance policy.  Walke gave Darke his (Darke’s) gun, Darke aimed wide and shot, and then Walke killed Darke.  Were you surprised at this event?

11.  At the end of the novel, Duchess was going to shoot Vincent (pages 350-351), but instead he backed up to the cliff and jumped.  Were you also surprised at this event?

12.  When Duchess was talking with her mother on the way home from the bar, Duchess said, “I just wish there was a middle, you know. Because that’s where people live. It doesn’t have to be all or nothing…sink or swim like that…Because when you’re sinking, you’re pulling us down with you” (page 42).  Do you agree – do most people just live in the middle?   Do you think Star was capable of making a change in her life?

13.  The title was in the text multiple times.  For example, when Walk took the children to Hal’s he said, “The minister said we begin at the end” (page 97).  Also, when Hal was shot, Duchess got the shotgun, saddled the gray horse and set out the follow the footprints.  As she did so she said, “We begin at the end” (page 224).  What did you think the title meant?

14.  Discuss your reading experience.  Did you like the book?  Would you recommend it to a friend?

The Glassmaker, by Tracy Chevalier

 

Characters

Rosso family:

Orsola

Marco -older brother

Giacomo – younger brother

Laura – mother, pregnant in chapter one

Lorenzo – father, killed by broken glass fragment

Stella – baby born during plague

 

Zia Giovanna – aunt, nun

 

Nicolatta – Marco’s wife, died during plague

Malcolin – son

Raffaele – Nicolatta and Marco’s son born during plague

 

Monica – Marco’s second wife

Rosella – daughter by first marriage, expert glassmaker

 

Isabella – Monica’s cousin, married Giacomo

Sons – Andrea and Sebastiano

 

Paolo – main assistant, left

 

Stefano – Marco’s new assistant, married Orsola

Angela - daughter

 

Assistants:

Garzonetti – fed furnace and swept floors

Garzoni – next step, six-year apprenticeship

 

Klingenberg – bought Rosso glass, encouraged Orsola to make beads

Jonas – assistant, opened own shop when Klingenberg left

 

Antonio – romance with Orsola, became apprentice in glass workshop, left for terraferma in chapter 3

 

Domenego -black gondolier for Klingenberg

 

Maria Barovier – bead maker, real person!

 

 

Timeline

Chapter 1: 1487 – 1494

 

Chapter 2: 1574 – plague

Orsola age 18

Stella and Raffaele born

 

Chapter 3: 1631

Monica Vianello – wet nurse, married Marco

 

Isabella – married Giacomo

 

Stefano -Marco’s servente, from Barovier workshop, wants to marry Orsola

 

Chapter 4: 1755

Orsola age 29

Giacomo Casanova – ordered mirror, chandelier and glasses, arrested, did not pay

 

Suggested Orsola make flat beads

 

Chapter 5: 1797

Orsola age 37

Venice and Murano given to the Austrians

Klingenberg closing business and moving

Jonas opening own business

 

Luciana comes from Venice to teach family how to string seed beads – popular with American Indians

 

Raffaele moves to Venice with Luciana

 

 Chapter 6: 1915 - WWI

Orsola age 44

Francisca also in Venice – married Luciana’s brother

 

Marchesa Luisa Casati – bought beads

 

Jonas back to Germany, died in concentration camp

 

 

WWI – every family had to send one son – Sebastiano volunteered to serve

Stella went as a nurse

 

After war, opened shop with Luciana in Venice – Rosso E Rosso

 

Chapter 7: 2019

Orsola age 65

100 years have passed

Stella died in war

 

Chapter 8

Orsola in her late 60s

Antonio has aged normally because on terrafirma

Great-great-great grandson gives Orsola a dolphin – making and sending her one over years has become a tradition in family

 

1.       How different was the plague in 1574 from COVID in 2020?  At least no one burnt all our linens and clothing and threw rocks at our houses!

2.       Did you like the way the novel showed history’s progression, for example the movement from gondolas to water buses in chapter 6 in 1915.

3.       At the end, were you surprised that Antonio had aged like a normal person, and his grandchildren had been making and sending the dolphins?  What do you think his grandchildren thought as they kept sending them off generation after generation to someone they did not know?

4.       Which family members were the most memorable to you?

5.       Was it realistic how easily Orsola handled the changes she experienced through the years or was her life so focused on the glassmaking she wasn’t affected by changes around her?  Given that this is a fiction book, does it matter?

6.       The beads became an important part of the family business in the 1700s – chapters 4 and 5.  How easy was it for the men to give up part of their enterprise and status?  Do you think it might have been more difficult than depicted in the book?

7.       What parts of the book were most memorable to you?

8.       Would you like to live that long and see all the changes in the world?

9.       Have you thought about beads and jewelry you have and how it was made?  Do you have any unusual pieces?

10.   Did you like the book?  Would you recommend it to others to read?