The
Fairfax Library Book Discussion Group will meet Thursday, June 8th at 7 p.m. in
the meeting room of the Fairfax Library to discuss our June book, Here Comes
the Sun by Nicole Dennis-Benn.
Discussion
questions are below.
Here
are some links for additional background and information:
Coming
up, we have the following books to look forward to reading:
Thurs.
July 13th The
Last Painting of Sara De Vos by Dominic Smith
Thurs.
Aug. 10th The
Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen
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
Here Comes the Sun by Nicole Dennis-Benn
- Riding
to work one day, Margot says, "Can't wait to leave dis godforsaken
place." When the taxi driver says, "we live by di sea,"
Margot responds "This is not paradise. At least, not for us." Talk
about the disparity between Jamaica's image as a tourist destination and
Jamaica as a place to live for its residents. If you've visited Jamaica,
or other Caribbean Islands, where you surprised by life portrayed in Here Comes the Sun?
- .
What do you think of the three women characters—Dolores, Margot, and
Thandi? The choices they make are problematic, to say the least. Can their
choices be understood, even acceptable, given the dire poverty the women
face?
- .
(Follow-up to Question 2) What do you think of the "extra
job" Margot undertakes in order to raise money for Thandi's
schooling? What else does Margot do to get ahead. Is she blameworthy or
can her choices be defended?
- .
Dolores believes that in her culture a woman is valued for "what's
between her legs." Is this a realistic assessment or a warped and
cynical one?
- .
What are the promises—and threats—of the proposed new hotel? Will it bring
hoped for prosperity or only destruction of the village?
- .
Discuss Thandi's decision to undergo skin bleaching and the hierarchy of
race as explained by the woman who administers the skin treatment.
- .
The book poses significant questions about greed and sacrifice, about
being desperate in paradise. What are the many humiliations undergone in
order to achieve security? What would any of us do—what would you do—in order to survive in a
culture and economy like these women face?
- .
Discuss homophobia in Jamaica. The author, herself a lesbian, chose to
leave Jamaica rather than live in a hostile environment. What about Margot
and Verdene? Will living in a gated community offer the protection Margot
dreams of?
- . Given the desperate lives the
women lead and the choices they make, do you find this book difficult to
read? Is it simply too grim? Or does the writing—in particular, the depth
of the characters and the complexity of the issues—redeem the book in your
eyes? (There is no single or right answer to this question!)
- . Nicole Dennis-Benn brings to life
a Jamaica that is removed from, yet also inextricably linked with the fantasy
world of the resorts. How does she create a distinct sense of place? Did
the Jamaica she conjures surprise you? Did it feel foreign or familiar?
11.
“God nuh like ugly,” Miss Ruby warns Thandi,
and her mother tells her, “nobody love a black girl.” How do racism, colorism,
and classism shape their society? How do these forces direct the characters’
lives, thoughts, and actions?
How did your understanding of Margot’s relationship with Delores change over the course of reading the novel? Do you find their actions toward one another understandable? Forgivable?
How did your understanding of Margot’s relationship with Delores change over the course of reading the novel? Do you find their actions toward one another understandable? Forgivable?
12.
Margot, Thandi, Delores, Verdene, and
Sweetness all have distinct, strong voices. Which of these women did you most
sympathize (or even identify) with? Which do you hold most accountable for her
actions?
13.
4. The ever-expanding
resorts threaten the homes of River Bank residents and destroy their
livelihoods as farmers and fishermen. Yet the hotel business also brings jobs
and, to ambitious people like Margot, the promise of prosperity. Do you
consider this kind of development progress? Why or why not? Did the novel
change your views?
14.
How do the women in the novel relate to men?
What effects do men have on women’s lives and senses of self?
How do Jamaican religion and tradition interact with encroaching modernity on the island? Which storylines illuminate this tension?
How do Jamaican religion and tradition interact with encroaching modernity on the island? Which storylines illuminate this tension?
15.
What are Margot’s motivations? Are they what
she says they are?
16.
After implementing her scheme, Margot sees
Miss Novia Scott-Henry crying in the hotel bathroom, “long streaks down her
face. Like scars.” Why do you think Dennis-Benn uses this startling imagery?
17.
Why does Margot react as she does when she
finds out Thandi has been bleaching her skin?
18.
What role does language play in this world,
and how does Dennis-Benn use it? What social and emotional associations does
the local patois carry?
19.
The book’s title sounds optimistic. Is that
expectation borne out?
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