Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Atmosphere, by Taylor Jenkins Reid

 

Characters

Joan Goodwin

Barbara – younger sister

Frances – Barbara’s daughter

 

Daniel – Barbara’s new husband

 

Joan on a space flight that launched in November 1984.

1979 – 1984 – NASA shuttle program

Group 9 – new astronauts (total 16):

Donna Fitzgerald

John Griff

Lydia Danes

Vanessa Ford – aeronautical engineer and commercial piolet

Joan Goodwin – astronomer

 

Antonio Lima – director of flight at Astronaut Office

Space Flight – December 1984

Navigator Spacecraft Crew:

Steve Hagen – commander

Hank Redmond – pilot

Mission Specialists:

John Griffin

Lydia Danes

Vanessa Ford

 

Mission Control:

Joan Goodwin – CAPCOM

Jack Katowski – Flight director

Ray Stone – flight surgeon

Greg Ullman – EECOM

 

 

NOTE: Page numbers are from the hardback edition.

1.      Discuss the various characters.  Did any of the others stick out to you besides Joan and Vanessa?

2.      Was there anything Joan could do to improve her relationship with Barbara?  Why couldn’t they understand each other?

3.      Did you learn anything about the space program?  What have you read previously about the program?  Do you have any specific memories about our space program?

4.      When Joan and Vanessa were astronaut candidates, everything they did was observed all of the time and all behavior recorded.   How would that feel?

5.      Did you understand Vanessa’s decision to risk her own life to try to save Lydia?

6.      Did you like the way the author inserted science in the text?  For example, when Barbara got engaged, the author wrote diamonds were not the strongest metal in the universe compared to the hardness of lonsdaleite from an asteroid that struck Earth in 1967.

7.      This story had multiple storylines.  Which ones stood out to you?  Did the author address each one in a thoughtful way?

a.      A love story between two women and the hardships faced in this time period as well as at NASA

b.      The difficulty of being a woman in the space program during the time of the novel  (The author specifically mentioned Sally Ride and the consequences if she had made a mistake on pages 223-224.)

c.      The physical and mental courage required of the astronauts

d.      The difficulty of being a single parent

e.      Sibling rivalry

8.      The author also addressed many deeper ideas and thoughts such as these.  Did anything else stand out to you?

a.      While Joan and others were in the plane experiencing weightlessness, she thought “Admitting you were afraid took more guts that pretending you weren’t…The world had decided that to be fallible was weak.  But we are all fallible.  The strong ones are the ones who accept it” (page 102).

b.      When Joan was on her flight, she and Harrison (crewmate) were looking down on earth and he said, “Hard to believe any one person has any significance…Human life is meaningless” but Joan was “overwhelmed with her own life’s meaning – and the fact that the only meaning it could have was the meaning she gave it” (page 280).

c.      When Vanessa’s brother was talking with her about what she is doing he said, “But if all I am doing with what I’ve learned is using it for myself, what kind of legacy is that?” (page 151).

9.      Discuss your reading experience.  Did you like that you had to read the entire novel to see how things turned out?  OR did you skip ahead the read the end at some point?

10.  The front of the book has the words “A Love Story” under the title.  Does that adequately describe the book?

The Address, by Fiona Davis

 

Characters

1884 – Sara Smythe

1985 – Bailey Camden

Theodore Camden – killed in the Dakota

Minnie – wife

Lulu and Luther – twins

Emily - older sister

Christopher – Sara and Theo’s son, adopted by family

 

The Dakota:

Fitzroy – head porter

Mr. Douglas – building agent

Daisy Cavanaugh – assistant, stole from tenants to support her family

Mrs. Haines – assistant and switch board

Camden – architectural team

Henry Hardenbergh – Camden’s boss

 

Blackwell’s Island Insane Asylum

 

Nellie Brown – Nellie Bly

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bailey – Parson’s School of Design

 

Tristan – business partner in Diego Crespo design company, let Bailey go after she got out of rehab

 

Silver Hill - rehabilitation for drinking

 

Peggy and Jack – Bailey’s parents

Christopher – Jack’s father, adopted as baby into Camden family

 

Melinda – friend

Manvel – twin brother

Theodore Camden – great-grandfather

Tony – Melinda’s boyfriend

 

Kenneth Worley – Dakota tenant

 

Renzo – Dakota superintendent, AA meetings with Bailey

 

 

1.      When Bailey was doing research on the Dakota, she used a card catalogue and microfiche.   Do you remember using these when you were in school?

2.      What did you think about Melinda completely remodeling her apartment and getting rid of the original workmanship? 

3.      Given the times, was there anything Daisy could have done to support herself and her siblings?

4.      Did the addition of Nellie Bly (Nellie Brown) add to the story for you?

5.      We are familiar with the Dakota because of John Lennon’s murder.   Did this knowledge add to your reading experience?

6.      Did the author do a good job of describing Bailey’s addiction and recovery?  Were you able to understand her feelings?

7.      Did you guess the ending - that Melinda and Manvel were not Theo’s real relations and that, through her father, Baily was?

8.      What were the clues the author wrote that led to the unraveling of the mystery?  For example, Bailey resembled Sara in the photo she found.

9.      This book followed a current trend in fiction where the story bounces back and forth in time and between characters. Did you like the way this author handled the transitions?  Were you able to keep everything and everyone straight?

10.  What was your reading experience?  Did you enjoy the novel?