Book Selection Status: READ
Month: March 2012
2. Describe the main characters—their personality traits, motivations, inner qualities. Why do they do what they do? Are their actions justified? Do you admire or disapprove of them? Do they remind you of people you know?
3. Do the main characters change by the end of the book? Do they grow, or come to learn something about themselves and how the world works?
Month: March 2012
Genre: Fiction
Book of the Month: The Boy In The Suitcase
Author: Lene Kaaberbol & Agnete Friis
Question source:
Discussion Questions:
1. How did you experience the book? Were you engaged immediately, or did it take you a while to
"get into it"? How did you feel reading it—amused, sad, disturbed, confused, bored...?
2. Describe the main characters—their personality traits, motivations, inner qualities. Why do they do what they do? Are their actions justified? Do you admire or disapprove of them? Do they remind you of people you know?
3. Do the main characters change by the end of the book? Do they grow, or come to learn something about themselves and how the world works?
4. Is the plot engaging—does the story interest you? Is this a plot-driven book: a fast-paced page-turner? Or does the story unfold slowly with a focus on character development? Were you surprised by the plot's complications? Or did you find it predictable, even formulaic?
5. Talk about the book's structure. Is it a continuous story...or interlocking short stories? Does the time-line more forward chronologically...or back and forth between past and present? Does the author use a single viewpoint or shifting viewpoints? Why might the author have choosen to tell the story the way he or she did—and what difference does it make in the way you read or understand it?
6. What main ideas—themes—does the author explore? Don't forget to talk about the title, often a clue to a novel's theme.
7. What passages strike you as insightful, even profound? Perhaps a bit of dialog that's funny or poignant...or encapsulates a character? Maybe comments that state the book's thematic concerns?
8. Is the ending satisfying? If so, why? If not, why not...and how would you change it?
9. If you could ask the author a question, what would you ask? Have you read other books by the same author? If so how does this book compare. If not, does this book inspire you to read others?
10. Has this novel changed you—broadened your perspective? Have you learned something new or been exposed to different ideas about people or a certain part of the world?
2 comments:
I learned alot reading this book about the value of money; I loved the way parts of the action were like pieces of a puzzle that forced the reader to pay attention.
In short-I loved this book.Dee
Thank you for these questions, we are going to use them as prompots in our first book club meeting tomorrow!
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