Friday, March 23, 2007

Changes-We are Evolving


You may have noticed that the club name keeps changing! First we decided to drop "boadacious" as it seemed to relate to Queen Boadicea and exclude the males in our club. Next to go was "bookies." Not sure why on that one, although I'm sure my 76-year-old mother is relieved that her daughter is not associated with anything that could be construed as gambling! (We don't, by the way, unless you count hazarding an opinion as risky.) Anyway, we are now the Beaufort Book Club.
Another change: While we are still reading Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert for April 19, the May 17 selection has changed to The Winter of Our Discontent by John Steinbeck. Beaufort Branch has one copy, Hilton Head Branch has 3 copies, and Bluffton has one regular print and one large print copy.
Books being considered for later meetings are:
The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson (summer)
The Bridge by Doug Marlette
The Awakening by Kate Chopin
The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion
Atonement by Ian McEwen
One Thousand White Women by Jim Fergus
The Bastard of Istanbulby Elif Shafak
anything by John Irving
Give this some thought and make your preferences known. Happy Reading!

Discussion Questions: Eat, Pray, Love


These questions are courtesy of the publisher of Eat, Pray, Love.

Discussion Questions From the Publisher
1. Gilbert writes that "the appreciation of pleasure can be the anchor of humanity," making the argument that America is "an entertainment-seeking nation, not necessarily a pleasure-seeking one." Is this a fair assessment?

2. After imagining a petition to God for divorce, an exhausted Gilbert answers her phone to news that her husband has finally signed. During a moment of quietude before a Roman fountain, she opens her Louise Glück collection to a verse about a fountain, one reminiscent of the Balinese medicine man's drawing. After struggling to master a 182-verse daily prayer, she succeeds by focusing on her nephew, who suddenly is free from nightmares. Do these incidents of fortuitous timing signal fate? Cosmic unity? Coincidence?

3. Gilbert hashes out internal debates in a notebook, a place where she can argue with her inner demons and remind herself about the constancy of self-love. When an inner monologue becomes a literal conversation between a divided self, is this a sign of last resort or of self-reliance?

4. When Gilbert finally returns to Bali and seeks out the medicine man who foretold her return to study with him, he doesn't recognize her. Despite her despair, she persists in her attempts to spark his memory, eventually succeeding. How much of the success of Gilbert's journey do you attribute to persistence?

5. Prayer and meditation are both things that can be learned and, importantly, improved. In India, Gilbert learns a stoic, ascetic meditation technique. In Bali, she learns an approach based on smiling. Do you think the two can be synergistic? Or is Ketut Liyer right when he describes them as "same-same"?

6. Gender roles come up repeatedly in Eat, Pray, Love, be it macho Italian men eating cream puffs after a home team's soccer loss, or a young Indian's disdain for the marriage she will be expected to embark upon at age eighteen, or the Balinese healer's sly approach to male impotence in a society where women are assumed responsible for their childlessness. How relevant is Gilbert's gender?

7. In what ways is spiritual success similar to other forms of success? How is it different? Can they be so fundamentally different that they're not comparable?

8. Do you think people are more open to new experiences when they travel? And why?

9. Abstinence in Italy seems extreme, but necessary, for a woman who has repeatedly moved from one man's arms to another's. After all, it's only after Gilbert has found herself that she can share herself fully in love. What does this say about her earlier relationships?

10. Gilbert mentions her ease at making friends, regardless of where she is. At one point at the ashram, she realizes that she is too sociable and decides to embark on a period of silence, to become the Quiet Girl in the Back of the Temple. It is just after making this decision that she is assigned the role of ashram key hostess. What does this say about honing one's nature rather than trying to escape it? Do you think perceived faults can be transformed into strengths rather than merely repressed?

10. Sitting in an outdoor café in Rome, Gilbert's friend declares that every city-and every person-has a word. Rome's is "sex," the Vatican's "power"; Gilbert declares New York's to be "achieve," but only later stumbles upon her own word, antevasin, Sanskrit for "one who lives at the border." What is your word? Is it possible to choose a word that retains its truth for a lifetime?