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9780345389930

Violet Clay

Violet Clay
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  • Comments: Paperback This item shows wear from consistent use but remains in good readable condition. It may have marks on or in it, and may show other signs of previous use or shelf wear. May have minor creases or signs of wear on dust jacket. Packed with care, shipped promptly.

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  • ISBN-13: 9780345389930
  • ISBN: 034538993X
  • Publication Date: 2005
  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group

AUTHOR

Godwin, Gail

SUMMARY

1. Violet comes to comprehend her uncle Ambrose's failed ambitions just as her own life seems to hit a dead end. What were your dreams for your life? Have they been fulfilled, abandoned, or diverted? What was the key episode that marked the transition? Does your story parallel Violet's in any way?2. The essence of "gothic," Milo says, at the end of chapter 14, has to do with family secrets that we tend to forget, "except when they manifest themselves in some form of brooding terror." How well have you known the brooding secrets of intimate partners? How dangerous are they?3. Look at the romantic relationships inViolet Clay. Who finds their right mate? What are the most positive things that a character does for his or her development? Are bad relationships harmful traps or steps in an evolution of personality? How do you get out of a bad relationship?4. If an epigraph at the beginning of a novel is a writer's secret message to a reader ("here's what you should be aware of, here's what lies behind my tale"), how does the quote fromThe Magic Flutesuggest you approach Violet's story?5. Godwin is known for weaving references to other books, music, and food into her novels. A reviewer once wrote: "After reading a Godwin novel, you find yourself going to the library to check out the book one of her characters has been reading, you ask the record store for her music, you cook her food" (Beverly Lowry, onA Southern Family, The New York Times Book Review,October 11, 1987). Can you cite examples of this? Did you find them effective and helpful to you as a reader?6. Godwin develops her story along several lines, including through the metaphor of color. How does she play on the color violet? What does the color violet mean to you, and how does that compare with others' subjective impressions of it?7. Godwin is considered by some to be writing within a Jane Austen tradition, which is sometimes considered mannered. Austen, however, expressed wicked insights and Godwin does the same in a contemporary vein. Share Godwin's wicked insights and suggestions. Should a writer temper shocking material?8.Violet Claybegins with a view of Violet in her studio. Violet than flashes back to her arrival in New York nine years earlier, and then further back to her stay at her grandmother's and her marriage to Lewis. In present time again, Violet loses her job and goes home and drinks. She recalls Ambrose giving her an inaugural tour of New York City, falls asleep, and awakens to a phone call that delivers the news of her uncle's suicide. How much of our real lives is consumed by reveries? Do our reveries sense, foreshadow, or set up what is to come? Are there patterns to our life storiesor do such patterns exist mostly in fiction?9. In Godwin stories, loss of consciousness and news of horror are often paired. Why is this a theme in Godwin's works?10. Ambrose's novel featured a Byronic hero. What is that? Is such a hero obsolete? (See the interview with Godwin in this volume.)11. In what ways is the Gothic romance related to ghost stories, or, at least, hauntings? Did you notice the reference to Henry James'sThe Turn of the Screw(Milo has a print of Charles Demuth's illustration for it); Milo's consultations with his late mother (chapter 6); and Violet's dialogue with Ambrose (chapter 16) as you read? What is the closest you have ever come to encountering a spirit?12. What do you make of dreams, and of the value of having a dialogue with your own, as Violet suggests Milo do with his dream of the murderous mother? What about directing your dreams, as Violet does in chapter 12?13. WhatGodwin, Gail is the author of 'Violet Clay ', published 2005 under ISBN 9780345389930 and ISBN 034538993X.

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