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message 1: by Coral (last edited Jan 17, 2014 09:48AM) (new)

Coral | 70 comments Mod
Next month, we will start our first online book club. Everyone who is participating will read the book and join our online discussion about it. We need some suggestions of titles. They can be adult or young adult, fiction or non-fiction. What should we read, and why? Spread the word--the more the merrier!


message 2: by Coral (last edited Feb 13, 2014 03:58PM) (new)

Coral | 70 comments Mod
For the month of March, we will be reading Major Pettigrew's Last Stand. You can get a head start now, or wait until March.

Once you've finished the book, post your comments below. Share with us your thoughts--what you liked, what you didn't like. We'd love to hear from you!


message 3: by Coral (new)

Coral | 70 comments Mod
If you've read this book, we'd love to hear your comments. Here are some questions to consider...

1. Major Pettigrew and Mrs. Ali have known one another for a time. What is it about this one moment, when he opens the door to her at the story's onset, that makes him fall in love with her?

2. How would you describe Major Pettigrew? In what way do we see him as "typically English"?

3. Reading and love of books play a defining role in how we are to perceive characters in this book. Talk about the differences in reading habits among Roger, Mrs. Ali, and Mr. Pettigrew.

4. How does Helen Simonson portray Americans in this novel? Is it a fair depiction...or over-drawn?

5. How are outsiders treated in this village...and who are considered outsiders?

6. Small mindedness is an underlying motif in this book. Who in the novel is small-minded? How does this parochialism lead to misunderstanding?

7. Talk about some of the book's humorous plot ingredients: the gun squabble, the aristocrat who loves to hunt, the golf club and its costume party tradition.

8. If you're a fan of English novels, especially the comedy of manners type, you will recognize Simonson's use of stock characters and set-up: a retired military man, a small quiet village, a local aristocrat, multiple misunderstandings. In what way does Simonson, while using these elements, create something deeper, more potent in Major Pettigrew's Last Stand?


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