Characters
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Major Pettigrew
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Wife – Nancy – deceased
Son – Roger – girlfriend Sandy
Brother – Bertie – deceased
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Marjorie – Bertie’s wife
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Jemima – daughter
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Mrs. Jasmina Ali
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Husband – deceased
Nephew – Abdul Wahid
Auntie – brought from Pakistan to “fix things” with Amina
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Others
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Vicar Father Christopher and wife, Daisy Green
Alec and Alma Shaw
Grace DeVere
Lord Dagenham
Gertrude – niece
Mr. Ferguson – American investor and developer
Najwa Rasool - caterer
Dr. Khan and Saadia – decorator
Noreen – assistant
Amina – niece
George – son of Amina and Abdul Wahid
Alice Pierce – neighbor, protesting new development
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- On page 66, Mrs. Ali says,
“The world is full of small ignorances, we must all do our best to ignore
them and thereby keep them small.”
Do you agree or it is better to try to fix them? What are some examples?
- Discuss the role of adult
children and their parents. Major
Pettigrew stated that, “…they began to infantilize their own parents and
wish them dead, or at least in assisted living.” What do you think?
- Reading plays a major role
in Major Pettigrew and Mrs. Ali’s life and relationship. Mrs. Ali stated, “…I tell myself that it
does not matter what one reads – favorite authors, particular themes – as
long as we read something. It is not even important to own the books”
(page 63). Discuss the importance of
reading to the two characters. What
role does reading play in your life?
- Discuss how the different
characters dealt with death. From
the “Acknowledgements,” it seems that the author parents and in-laws are
still living. How do you think she
was able to understand grief?
- Were you surprised to find
out why Auntie was here? Did you
feel differently about her once you knew the story of her mother’s death?
- When the Major asked Amina
why she was trying to teach the servers at the club the folk-dance
routines, she said, “If it was easy, I wouldn’t have done it…I don’t take
charity” (page 143). What does this
say about Amina’s character?
- When the Major was
apologizing for something the club secretary said to Amina, she replied,
“Don’t worry about it. I don’t have
space in my head to put up with harmless old gits trying to make me feel
bad” (page 148). How easy is it to
do this?
- In the same conversation,
the Major said, “…I believe there is a great deal too much mutual
confession going on today, as if sharing one’s problems somehow makes them
go away. All it really does, of
course, is increase the number of people who have to worry about a
particular issue” (page 149). How
does our online culture (Facebook and Twitter) play into this?
- When the Major told Alice
that he would not publicly support the protest of Ferguson and Dagenham’s
plans to turn the meadow into a new development, he said, “But I cannot,
in good conscience, assist you with any civic unrest.” What is the line between being
environmentally conscious and civic unrest?
- In discussing the planned
protests, Alice said, “Everyone’s green except for their one little
project, which they assure us won’t make much difference…” (page
163). Is this the way it really is?
- Discuss the pair of
Churchill rifles that was in the Major’s family. Was he justified in his feelings about
the importance of the pair of guns?
In the end, how was he able to let the one go so easily? Do we put too much value in material
things?
- When Amina and the Major
were talking about Mrs. Ali going back to Pakistan where she had stated
she did not want to go, Amina said, “You can’t reduce life to something as
simple as happiness…There’s always some bloody compromise to be
made.” Do you agree? Do we put too much emphasis on
happiness?
- What did you think about the prejudice against the immigrants in the novel? Did you think the citizens from Pakistan were treated equally or did assimilation seem to stop at a certain extent of familiarity?
*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies and Motivation for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at amazon.com, wordassociation.com and barnesandnoble.com. Click on the upper right link.
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