Thursday, September 12, 2013

Behind the Beautiful Forevers Sept. 2013

September 2013 Book Selection

The Fairfax Library Book Discussion Group will meet Thursday, September 12th at 7 p.m. in the meeting room of the Fairfax Library to discuss our September book: Behind The Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo.


Discussion  are below.

Here are some links for additional background and information:


Author Interview on her website (Be sure to look at other links on the site)






Coming up, we have the following books to look forward to reading:


Thurs., Oct 10         Little Bee by Chris Cleave

Thurs. Nov. 7          Dreamers of the Day by Mary Doria Russell(please note date change)

Thurs. Dec. 12        Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain


Thanks for reading with us. I look forward to seeing you at the Fairfax Library.

Beth Bailey-Gates
Friends of the Fairfax Library


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Behind the Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo

1. Barbara Ehrenreich calls Behind the Beautiful Forevers “one of the most powerful indictments of economic inequality I’ve ever read.” Yet the book shows the world of the Indian rich–lavish Bollywood parties, an increasingly glamorous new airport–almost exclusively through the eyes of the Annawadians. Are they resentful? Are they envious? How does the wealth that surrounds the slumdwellers shape their own expectations and hopes?
2. As Abdul works day and night with garbage, keeping his head down, trying to support his large family, some other citydwellers think of him as garbage, too. How does Abdul react to how other people view him? How would you react? How do Abdul and his sort-of friend, Sunil, try to protect themselves and sustain self-esteem in the face of other people’s contempt?
3. The lives of ordinary women– their working lives, domestic lives, and inner lives–are an important part of Behind the Beautiful Forevers. The author has noted elsewhere that she’d felt a shortage of such accounts in nonfiction about urban India. Do women like Zehrunisa and Asha have more freedom in an urban slum than they would have had in the villages where they were born? What is Meena, a Dalit, spared by living in the city? What freedoms do Meena, Asha, and Zehrunisa still lack, in your view?
4. Asha grew up in rural poverty, and the teenaged marriage arranged by her family was to a man who drank more than he worked. In Annawadi, she takes a series of calculated risks to give her daughter Manju a life far more hopeful than that of other young women such as Meena. What does Asha lose by her efforts to improve her daughter’s life chances? What does she gain? Were Asha’s choices understandable to you, in the end?
5. The author has said elsewhere that while the book brings to light serious injustices, she believes there is also hope on almost every single page: in the imaginations, intelligence and courage of the people she writes about. What are the qualities of a child like Sunil that might flourish in a society that did a better job of recognizing his capacities?
6. When we think of corruption, the examples tend to be drawn from big business or top levels of government. The kind of corruption Behind the Beautiful Forevers show us is often described as “petty”. Do you agree with that characterization of the corruption Annawadians encounter in their daily lives? Why might such corrruption be on the increase as India grows wealthier as a nation? The author states: “The effect of corruption I find most underacknowledged is a contraction not of economic possibility but of our moral universe.” Is corruption an economic problem or a moral problem?
7. Does Asha have a point when she argues that something isn’t wrong if the powerful people say that it’s right? How does constant exposure to corruption change a person’s internal understanding of right and wrong?
8. Shortly before Abdul is sent to juvenile jail, a major newspaper runs a story about the facility headlined: “Dongri Home is a Living Hell.” Abdul’s experience of Dongri is more complex, though. How does being wrenched away from his work responsibilities at Annawadi change his understandings of the hardships of other people? Are terms like liberty and freedom understood differently by people who live in different conditions?
9. Fatima’s neighbors view her whorling rages, like her bright lipsticks, as free comic entertainments. How has her personality been shaped by the fact that she has been defined since birth by her disability–very literally named by it? Zehrunusa waivers between sympathy for and disapproval of her difficult neighbor. In the end, did you?
10. Zehrunisa remembers a time when every slumdweller was roughly equal in his or her misery, and competition between neighbors didn’t get so out of hand. Abdul doesn’t know whether or not to believe her account of a gentler past. Do you believe it? Might increased hopes for a better life have a dark as well as a bright side?
11. Many Annawadians–Hindu, Muslim, and Christian– spend less time in religious observance than they did when they were younger, and a pink temple on the edge of the sewage lake goes largely unused. In a time of relative hope and constant improvisation for the slumdwellers, why might religious practice be diminishing? What role does religious faith still play in the slumdwellers’ lives?
12. Who do you think had the best life in the book, and why?
13. In the Author’s Note Katherine Boo emphasizes the volatility of an age in which capital moves quickly around the planet, government supports decline, and temporary work proliferates. Had the author followed the families of Annawadi for only a few weeks or months, would you have come away with a different understanding of the effects of that volatility? Does uncertainty about their homes and incomes change how Annawadians view their neighbors? Does economic uncertainty affect relationships where you live?
14. At one point in the book, Abdul takes to heart the moral of a Hindu myth related by The Master: Allow your flesh to be eaten by the eagles of the world. Suffer nobly, and you’ll be rewarded in the end. What is the connection between suffering and redemption in this book? What connections between suffering and redemption do you see in your own life? Are the sufferers ennobled? Are the good rewarded in the end?
15. In the Author’s Note, Katherine Boo says she was looking to read a book that answered certain questions: What is the infrastructure of opportunity in this society? Whose capabilities are given wing by the market and a government’s economic and social policy? Whose capabilities are squandered? By what means might that ribby child grow up to be less poor? Does her book answer these questions?


Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Lucky Jim - Aug. 2013

August 2013 Book Selection

The Fairfax Library Book Discussion Group will meet Thursday, August 8th at 7 p.m. in the meeting room of the Fairfax Library todiscuss our August book: Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis.


Discussion questions are below.

Here are some links for additional background and information:





Lucky Jim has been filmed twice – once in 1957 and a BBC version in 2003. Watch short excerpts by clicking on the links.



Coming up, we have the following book to look forward to reading:


Thurs., Sept 12       Behind the Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo


Thanks for reading with us. I look forward to seeing you at the Fairfax Library.

Beth Bailey-Gates
Friends of the Fairfax Library


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis


1              What do you think Amis meant by referring to Jim as “lucky” in the book’s title?
2              At the beginning of Lucky Jim, Kingsley Amis compares assistant history professor Jim Dixon with Dixon’s department head, Professor Welch. What sets Dixon and Welch apart? How do their attitudes towards the study of history differ? How does their class background influence their sense of responsibility, whether academic or social? Are they alike in any ways?
3              What role(s) does humor play in Lucky Jim? As we can see with Jim’s somewhat dire situation, comedy is often generated at the expense of the misfortune of others. What does Amis’s use of humor say about his attitude towards university life? Do you feel that those who are mocked deserve it? Who, if anyone, comes out unscathed?
4              Some modern critics have labeled Kingsley Amis a misogynist. From his portraits of Margaret Peel, Christine Callahan, Carol Goldsmith, Mrs. Welch, and Miss Cutler, would you agree with this assessment? How is each portrayed? What traits does Amis seem to value in women? How do his female characters relate to men? Do you think that Amis was simply a “man of his times”? What do you think of this defense or explanation?
5              Kingsley Amis was one of Britain’s “Angry Young Men,” a group of postwar authors from working-class backgrounds who aimed to skewer upper-class pretensions. What evidence of this do you find in Lucky Jim? How is this portrayed in the book?
6              Speculate on a contemporary version of Lucky Jim: do race, gender, and class play different roles today? How have immigration and affirmative action changed society? What might Kingsley Amis have to say about “political correctness?” Which of today’s issues might Amis take on? What might be Jim’s “lucky” end today?
7              Is familiarity with the British education and class systems helpful to understand and enjoy Lucky Jim and his predicaments? How has the humor aged since the book was first published in 1954?
8              Christopher Hitchins, in his 2002 article about Lucky Jim in The Atlantic writes, Lucky Jim illustrates a crucial human difference between the little guy and the small man. And Dixon, like his creator, was no clown but a man of feeling after all.” Do you agree with this assessment of Jim Dixon?


Thursday, July 4, 2013

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks July 2013

July 2013 Book Selection

The Fairfax Library Book Discussion Group will meet this Thursday, July 11th at 7 p.m. in the meeting room of the Fairfax Library to discuss our July book: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.


Discussion questions are below. Here are some links for additional background and information:



Comprehensive Reader’s Guide from the author’s website

1998 BBC Documentary about HeLa and Henrietta Lacks (the Lacks family appears at around the 40 minute mark.)

The Stanford Prison experiment – a psychology experiment that triggered changes in the ethics standards of the American Psychological Association.

This American Life just updated their Patent Trolls story last month. Is this related to patenting genes?



Coming up, we have the following book to look forward to reading:

  
Thurs. Aug. 8              Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis

Thurs., Sept 12           Behind the Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo


Thanks for reading with us. I look forward to seeing you at the Fairfax Library.

Beth Bailey-Gates
Friends of the Fairfax Library


Discussion Questions
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot

1) The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is the story of an African American woman and her family that  touches on many big issues: bioethics, racism, poverty, science, faith, and more. What threads stand out to you and why?
2) Race and racism are woven throughout the book, both in the story presented and in the process of the research for the book. Skloot was yet another white person asking the Lacks family about Henrietta. How do you feel about a white woman creating the narrative of this story? How did her race help or hinder Skloot in the writing and researching of the book?
3) The author notes social inequities both explicitly and implicitly. What parts of Henrietta’s story might be different if she had been white? What might have been different if she had been middle or upper middle class?
4) What role did the deferential attitude toward doctors in the early 20th century play in the interaction between Henrietta and her family and Johns Hopkins? How has that attitude toward doctors changed over the decades? Do patients’ socioeconomic differences affect the relationship today?
5) Henrietta Lacks died in 1951, but her cancer cells are still alive today. Do you think they carry some essence of Henrietta? How do you think you would perceive cells from someone close to you that grow in culture in a laboratory?
6) A week after you finish reading the book, will you remember how cells divide? Do you now have a better understanding of cell biology? Either way, does it matter to you?
7) What does this book tell us about the history of science and how science has progressed since the 1950s? After reading this book and considering the events it details, what do you think are key factors that influence scientific progress?
8) The book is filled with stories of people used as research subjects, sometimes without their knowledge, sometimes with ill-informed consent, sometimes because of their inability to understand (patients with mental illness) or resist (prisoners). Were you aware of this history before reading the book? Do you think doctors and researchers of the past had a fundamentally different view of people than they do today?
9) Today the definition of ‘informed consent’ remains murky. What did you learn about what it means or doesn’t mean? What does it mean to you?
10) In the years since the uniqueness of Henrietta Lacks’s cells were discovered, others have been identified with cells that are valuable on the research market. In Chapter Five, Skloot details the history of  John Moore, whose cells produced rare proteins, and Ted Slavin, whose cells produced valuable antibodies. All three cases are quite different in many ways, including how their doctors used the information. Should individuals be able to profit from their own cells? Should their doctors? With consent? Do you think Henrietta would have provided consent for her cells to be taken and used had she been asked?
11) How do you think Zakariyya reacted to the completed book and to the way the family was depicted? How do you think Deborah would have reacted?
12) One of the issues the book addresses is patient privacy. Henrietta completely lost hers long before the book was published, but also didn’t get the fame her daughter, Deborah, thought she so richly deserved. Why does Deborah want fame for Henrietta?
13) Skloot had to make a lot of choices about how she recounted Henrietta’s story and how she structured the book. What do we know about her process from the foreword and endnotes? How does her narrative reconstruction of Henrietta’s life impact the story? How do you feel about the reconstruction?
14) Skloot recounts Deborah’s abuse by Galen in Chapter 15. While difficult to read, it gives the reader important information about what Deborah has been through. Why did Deborah think this part of her story was important to the overall narrative? Does it change how you see Deborah? Her father, Day?
15) Skloot tells several stories in this book: personal, family and scientific. How is she able to do this? In an interview with Booklist magazine  Skloot says she first heard of HeLa cells at the age of 16 when her own father was battling a viral infection with experimental drugs administered three to four times a week. Do you think her father’s illness influenced her decision to pursue this story? Might his illness and treatment have influenced what threads she included in the book?
16) Making health care affordable to all Americans has been a recent political focus. What does the story of Henrietta Lacks and her family add to this discussion?


Thursday, June 6, 2013

The Tiger's Wife - June 2013

June 2013 Book Selection

The Fairfax Library Book Discussion Group will meet  Thursday, June 13th at 7 p.m. in the meeting room of the Fairfax Library to discuss our June book: The Tiger’s Wife by Tea Obreht.

Discussion questions are below.

Here are some links for additional background and information:


Think escaped tigers are rare? Think again!


Short synopsis of The Jungle Book



Coming up, we have the following books to look forward to reading:

Thurs. July 11 The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot

Thurs. Aug. 8  Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis

Thanks for reading with us. I look forward to seeing you at the Fairfax Library.

Beth Bailey-Gates
Friends of the Fairfax Library


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
The Tiger’s Wife by Tea Obrecht

1. Natalia says that the key to her grandfather’s life and death “lies between two stories: the story of the tiger’s wife, and the story of the deathless man.” What power do the stories we tell about ourselves have to shape our identity and help us understand our lives?

2. Which of the different ways the characters go about making peace with the dead felt familiar from your own life? Which took you by surprise?

3. Natalia believes that her grandfather’s memories of the village apothecary “must have been imperishable.” What lesson do you think he might have learned from what happened to the Apothecary?

4. What significance does the tiger have to the different characters in the novel: Natalia, her grandfather, the tiger’s wife, the villagers? Why do you think Natalia’s grandfather’s reaction to the tiger’s appearance in the village was so different than the rest of the villagers?

5. “The story of this war—dates, names, who started it, why—that belongs to everyone,” Natalia’s grandfather tells her. But “those moments you keep to yourself” are more important. By eliding place names and specific events of recent Balkan history, what do you think the author is doing?

6. When the deathless man and the grandfather share a last meal before the bombing of Sarobor, the grandfather urges the deathless man to tell the waiter his fate so he can go home and be with his family. Is Gavran Gailé right to decide to stop telling people that they are going to die? Would you rather know your death was coming or go “in suddenness”?

7. Did knowing more about Luka’s past make him more sympathetic? Why do you think the author might have chosen to give the back stories of Luka, DariÅ¡a the Bear, and the apothecary?

8. The copy of The Jungle Book Natalia’s grandfather always carries around in his coat pocket is not among the possessions she collects after his death. What do you think happens to it?

9. The novel moves back and forth between myth and modern-day “real life.” What did you think of the juxtaposition of folklore and contemporary realism?

10. Of all the themes of this novel—war, storytelling, family, death, myth, etc.—which one resonated the most for you?


Thursday, May 2, 2013

The Sandcastle Girls - May 2013

May 2013 Book Selection

The Fairfax Library Book Discussion Group will meet tomorrow -  Thursday, May 9th at 7 p.m. in the meeting room of the Fairfax Library to discuss our May book:The Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian.


Discussion questions are below.

Here are some links for additional background and information:



(DISTURBING!) Photos from 1915 – from the Near East Relief Society and from Armeniapedia

Story of Maria Jacobsen, a Danish missionary to Armenia during the genocide

Two YouTube videos – a 9 minute history of Armenia and BBC documentaryabout the genocide



Coming up, we have the following book to look forward to reading:

Thurs., June 13           The Tiger’s Wife by Tea Obrecht

Thurs. July 11             The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot


Thanks for reading with us. I look forward to seeing you at the Fairfax Library.

Beth Bailey-Gates
Friends of the Fairfax Library


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
The Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian

1. Though The Sandcastle Girls is a novel, author Chris Bohjalian (and fictional narrator Laura Petrosian) based their storytelling on meticulous research. What can a novel reveal about history that a memoir or history book cannot? Before reading The Sandcastle Girls, what did you know about the Armenian genocide? How does this history broaden your understanding of current events in the regions surrounding Armenia?

2. What lies at the heart of Armen and Elizabeth’s attraction to each other, despite their seemingly different backgrounds? What gives their love the strength to transcend distance and danger?

3. The novel includes characters such as Dr. Akcam, Helmut, and Orhan, who take great risks opposing the atrocities committed by their superiors; Bohjalian does not cast the “enemy” as uniformly evil. What do these characters tell us about the process of resistance? What separates them from the others, who become capable of horrific, dehumanizing acts?

4. Discuss the bond between Nevart and Hatoun. What do they demonstrate about the traits, and the trauma, of a survivor? How do they redefine motherhood and childhood?

5. Bohjalian is known for creating inventive, authentic narrators for his novels, ranging from a midwife to a foster child. Why was it important for The Sandcastle Girls to be told primarily from the point of view of a woman? How was your reading affected by the knowledge that the author is a man?

6. In chapter 9, Elizabeth courageously quotes the Qur’an to appeal to the conscience of the Turkish lieutenant. What diplomacy lessons are captured in that moment? For the novel’s characters—from aid workers to Armenians who tried to convert—what is the role of religion?

7. When Laura describes the music of her 1960s youth, her steamy relationship with Berk, her belly-dancing aunt, and other cultural memories, what is she saying about the American experience of immigration and assimilation? Culturally, what did her grandfather sacrifice in order to gain security and prosperity in America?

8. Discuss the various aid workers depicted in the novel. What motivated them to assist in this particular cause? Do Alicia, Sister Irmingard, and Elizabeth achieve similar outcomes despite their different approaches? What overseas populations would you be willing to support so courageously?

9. Does Ryan Martin use his power effectively? How does Elizabeth gain power in a time period and culture that was marked by the oppression of women?

10. The vivid scenes of Gallipoli bring to life the global nature of war over the past century. As Armen fights alongside Australians, what do we learn about the power and the vulnerabilities of multinational forces? What did it mean for his fellow soldiers to fight for a cause so far removed from their own homelands, and for his own countrymen to rely on the mercy of outsiders?

11. At the end of chapter 19, does Elizabeth make the right decision? How would you have reacted in the wake of a similar tragedy?

12. How do Laura’s discoveries enrich her sense of self? Discuss your own heritage and its impact on your identity. How much do you know about your parents’ and grandparents’ upbringing? What immigration stories are part of your own family’s collective memory?

13. As she tries to explain why so few people are aware of the Armenian genocide, Laura cites the fact that the victims perished in a remote desert. The novel also describes the problem of trying to document the atrocities using the cumbersome photography equipment of the day. Will the Information Age spell the end of such cover-ups? For future generations, will genocide be unimaginable?

14. Which aspects of The Sandcastle Girls remind you of previous Bohjalian novels you have enjoyed?
15. The Turkish government still vehemently denies the fact of the Armenian genocide. Why is this so important to Turks? Is their denial similar to Holocaust deniers? Why or why not?




Thursday, April 4, 2013

Packing for Mars - April 2013

April 2013 Book Selection

The Fairfax Library Book Discussion Group will meet  Tuesday, April 16th at 7 p.m. in the meeting room of the Fairfax Library to discuss our April book: Packing for Mars by Mary Roach.

(Please note new day and date this month)

Discussion questions are below.

Here are some links for additional background and information:

The Daily Show interview with Mary Roach

Wikipedia article about Pascal Lee

News article about Devon Island and some Mars Society FAQs





After this month, we’re back to our normal second Thursday of the month meeting time.

Coming up, we have the following book to look forward to reading:

Thurs., May 9           The Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian

Bohjalian powerfully narrates an intricately nuanced romance with a complicated historical event at the forefront. With the centennial of the Armenian genocide fast approaching, this is not to be missed. Simply astounding….. Library Journal


Thanks for reading with us. I look forward to seeing you at the Fairfax Library.

Beth Bailey-Gates
Friends of the Fairfax Library


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Packing for Mars by Mary Roach

1.    Did you or someone you know want to become an astronaut when you were a kid? Has this book changed your view of what it would be like? How?
2.    What do you think is the hardest part about being an astronaut? Easiest?
3.    Potential astronauts are observed for a number of days in close quarters with other candidates to see how they cope in stressful situations. How do you think you would fare in this type of experiment? Would you make it to the end? What type of personality traits would you need to make it through?
4.    When Mary Roach visits the Flight Analogs Research Unit, she meets people who are paid to lie in bed to simulate the body’s degradations during space flight. Besides the money, why would people be interested in becoming human guinea pigs? Would you consider trying this?
5.    Roach talks about the first test flights using rhesus monkeys after World War II. What do you think of this type of animal testing? Was it necessary? How could it have been different?
6.    Why do you think humans are so fascinated by the prospect of visiting Mars and beyond? What is it about the unknown that is so intriguing?
7.    Why do you think nations glorify astronauts? Do they risk more than people in other dangerous professions?
8.    Cultural differences can cause major problems on space flights. How do you think space agencies should deal with these differences? How can people from various national backgrounds be taught to understand other cultures?
9.    How do you think the space program will progress in the future? Do you think we should try to reach the outer limits of visible space?
10. Roach ends her work very optimistically about the future of space travel. After reading about all the dangers and costs associated with space travel, do you think it is worth it?
11. Most reviewers have talked about the humor in Mary Roach's book, a number using the word "hilarious." What do you find particularly funny in Packing for Mars? Does her humor enhance her narrative...or, as one lonely reader thought, become tiresome and distracting?
12. Does this book's irreverent look at space travel deflate your balloon—reverence you may have felt for the men and women who don space suits and enter the zone of zero gravity? Does the book bring astronauts back down to earth a bit too precipitously for your taste? In other words, has Mary Roach made human space travel a noble endeavor...or an absurd one?
13. Talk about the toll that zero gravity has on humans—biologically and psychologically. What is the most difficult challenge for long-term manned (or womanned) space travel?
14. After having read this book, and knowing how space travel affects the human body and its bodily functions, would you, if given a chance, want to go into space? Of all the problems/issues Roach describes—biological, social, psychological—which would be the hardest for you?
15. Did this book alter—or confirm—your view of NASA and the people who devote their lives to space travel? Do you feel differently about the entire space program—its long-range goals and its costs?
16. Should the U.S. continue its efforts to travel to Mars? With humans...or robots?
17. What were some of the things that most surprised you in reading Roach's book? Which chapters did you find most interesting...and why?
18. Of the former astronauts Roach interviewed, do any, in particular, stand out—some you admire more than others or found more engaging?
19. Do you think some of Roach's interview questions are too close to the bone—too personal or probing? Or do you think her inteview technique enables her to uncover valuable and heretofore unkown information?