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Discussion Questions:
1. Clearly
everyone doesn't go through the grieving
process in the same way and at the same
speed. What does Sophie's experience tell us
about grief? How do Sophie and Marion differ
when it comes to grieving? What aspects of
Sophie's grief can you relate to? Are we
sometimes too quick to tell people to "get
over it," and move on with their grief? How
might we be more comforting to those who are
struggling with grief?
2. The
theme of illness or decay extends beyond
Ethan's death. At one point, Sophie says, "I
look at the house and all I see is cancer."
Her house then becomes literally much
emptier than when Ethan was alive. Do you
think that the death of a loved one casts a
shadow on a living space? What other clues
does the author give that Sophie must leave
the house she shared with Ethan?
3. As a
young widow, Sophie feels alienated at times
from other widows and widowers in her
therapy sessions, and among her friends.
Does her youth make it more difficult for
others to sympathize with her? Along these
lines, does her youth make it harder for her
to cope with Ethan's death?
4.
Crystal is one of the most intriguing
characters in the novel in that she both
provides comfort to Sophie and gets under
her skin. Do you think Crystal helps restore
a sense of control in Sophie's life, or does
she take it away because she is so trying of
Sophie's patience?
5. Low
self-esteem is a huge problem for both
Sophie and Crystal, but they cope with it
differently. How does each character deal
with their self-esteem and confidence
issues? How does Sophie's experience with
low self-esteem help Crystal overcome her
cycle of self-destruction?
6.
Sophie's mother dies when she is a young
girl. Yet for someone who grew up without a
mother, she demonstrates an incredible
maternal instinct. Towards the end of
Ethan's illness, Sophie was a caregiver. And
at the end of the novel Sophie becomes a
surrogate mother for Crystal and Marion (and
even Drew in the last scene) -once again she
is in the position of being a maternal
caregiver. Is being a motherly-type figure
therapeutic to Sophie? Does being a parental
figure help Sophie overcome Ethan's death?
Aside from her father's visit, do we ever
see Sophie allowing herself to be taken care
of?
7. At
one point in the novel Sophie says, "Here's
what happens in the movies: A single woman
moves to a small town in the country to
start over, and a rugged Sam Shepard kind of
guy-lean and muscular, a cleft chin, and a
thirty-three-inch waist in faded Levis's-
finds her." Yet at the end of the novel
she's involved with Drew, a handsome actor.
Did you find that unbelievable or
disappointing? Or did you think that was
okay since clearly her knight on a white
horse has already revealed that he has some
commitment issues?
8. The
concept of the non-traditional family
manifests itself several times in the novel.
After Ethan's death, Sophie finds herself
with her father living 3,000 miles away and
no other immediate relatives to turn to. By
the end of the novel, how has Sophie's
notion of a "family" changed? Who
constitutes this new family? Can this new
family fill the void that Ethan left?
9.
Sophie clings to Ethan's possessions and
becomes very attached to his ski sweater
over the course of the story, almost
personifying it. Finally, she decides to
part with most of Ethan's belongings, even
the sweater. Why is it so difficult to part
with the physical things left behind when
someone dies? Does wearing and holding onto
this sweater help Sophie overcome Ethan's
death, or does it impede her progress of
moving on with her life? Is Jasper a good
home for Ethan's sweater, or should Sophie
have kept it?
10. Do
you think the expression "good grief" is
apt? Is a grieving period necessary in order
to recover and move on? And do you think
someone ever moves on from a loss such as
one that Sophie experienced?
11. The
notion of loyalty and commitment comes up
throughout the book: Sophie's loyalty
towards Ethan and her guilt about starting a
new relationship with Drew, Ruth's
commitment to her failed marriage and
reluctance to let it go, even Marion, with
her Alzheimer's, maintains a committed
belief that Ethan is alive. When is it okay
to acknowledge that something - a
relationship, a person - has died and that
the person left behind can start anew?
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