1. It's 1945. Father James Monroe. Care to
comment?
2. Point to some of the book's humor — what do you find funny? Is
Cyril's voice, or some of his observations, from the womb funny, for
instance?
3. Describe the Church's position in the young republic of Ireland and
talk about how its power changes by 2015.
4. Cyril knows he is gay; how does he deal with this knowledge,
especially in the middle years of the 20th century?
5. What do you make of Cyril's adoptive family, especially his father
Charles who insists that Cyril is "not really an Avery" and that he
should consider his growing up years with the family as a "tenancy."
What does he mean by that, and how do those words affect Cyril?l
6. Why does Maude Avery disdain popularity as a writer? Why does she
bother to write and sell books?
7. How would you delineate Cyril's interior monologues from his outward
behavior. How do those two modes differ?
8. John Boyne's book is very much about self-transformation. "Even at
that tender age I knew that there was something about me that was
different and that it would be impossible ever to put right." Is change
possible after a certain age, after the brain becomes less malleable?
9. Boyne peppers his writing with coincidence. Why might he do so: what
is he suggesting by its frequent use?
10. Talk about post-war Ireland in the 1950s. In what way might you
describe it as nightmarish?
11. Consider the book's title. What are the furies, and why invisible?
Boyne reserves much of his ire not only for the clergy, but also
politicians. What makes him angry?
12. Which section of The Heart's Invisible Furies engage you more
than the others … and why?
* Some questions from
LitLovers.