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DISCUSSION QUESTIONS The Nature of the Beast |
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1. This novel is set in early autumn, with
many references to apples throughout. What are some of those references,
and what are some of their symbolic meanings?
2. In Chapter 4 there is a discussion about
whether one can or should separate the quality of art from the character
of the artist. “You're an artist,” ReineMarie says to Clara. “Do you
think a work should be judged by its creator? Or should it stand on its
own?” What do you stand on this issue?
3. How unsettling did you find the murder
of a child in the story? Did you feel it was handled with appropriate
respect and sensitivity? How does the author deal with the effects of
the death on his friends and family?
4. The painful search for Laurent in the
woods is made even more painful by the scene in which the young
policemen taunt Gamache. How do you see him at that moment? Does he
respond as you'd wish?
5. Ruth says in Chapter 34,“I was nice
once, you know. And kind. Perhaps not the most kind, or the nicest, but
it was there.”. How do you view her character then and now? What guilt
and other demons is she wrestling with?
6. What do you think of Professor
Rosenblatt, Mary Fraser and Sean Delorme? Why do you think they have
come to Three Pines, and how does Three Pines look to you through their
eyes?
7. As he struggles with regrets over
Laurent, the past and present threat of Fleming, and decisions about his
future, what tough choices does Gamache need to make in the course of
the story? What do you think of his decisions?
8. How does Clara evolve from the beginning
of the book to the end (and/or, if you have read the previous books,
throughout the series)?
9. How do you view Reine-Marie, both as
Armand's wife and as a character in her own right?
10. This is the first novel in which Louise
has included an historical note. How does the added background affect
your view of the story?
11. How do you interpret the book's title?
Ruth quotes from Yeats's poem The
Second Coming: “And what rough beast, its hour come round at
last/Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born.” What is the beast? In the
poem? In the book? What do those lines mean to you?
12. The attractions of Three Pines are
clearly immense, but so are its dangers: As Beauvoir says, “Where else
would the devil go, but to paradise?” If it were a real place, what do
you think it would be like to live there? |
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