Contents:
1. About the Author
2. About the Novel
3. Questions for Discussion
Readers' Group Companion to The Paperboy © 1996 by Dell
Publishing.
About the Author:
Pete Dexter has been a reporter and columnist in Florida and Philadelphia and
writes a weekly syndicated column for The Sacramento Bee. His previous
books include God's Pocket, Deadwood, Brotherly Love, and
Paris Trout, for which he won the National Book Critics Circle Award.
He lives on an island in Puget Sound.
About the Novel:
Set in the fascinating and exploitative world of newspapers, The
Paperboy follows Ward James, a hard--hitting journalist for the Miami
Times as he investigates the grisly disemboweling of a local sheriff. As
the man accused of the killing awaits execution on death row, his sexy
fiancée--a woman with a penchant for convicted killers--rallies for his
innocence. Ward's story gets cut short when he is badly beaten by two sailors,
so his flamboyant partner, Yardley Acheman, steps in to finish the piece, and
in the process adds a few fictional details. Told through the eyes of Jack,
Ward's younger brother, we see this engrossing story unfold as the emotionally
stifled Ward grapples with his long-hidden desires, and the unsavory side of
newspaper journalism is starkly exposed.
Praise for The Paperboy:
"Hip, hard-boiled and filled with memorable eccentrics."
--Time
"A wise and fascinating tale well told."
--Entertainment Weekly
"First-rate Pete Dexter. That is as good as things get, and not quite like
what anything else gets."
--Los Angeles Times
"With clarity and an amazing capacity for simplicity of language and down-home
metaphor, Dexter weaves a tale that exposes the extremes of goodness and
nastiness that exist in newspaper life."
--The Washington Post
Questions for Discussion:
1. The book begins with the death of Sheriff Call, about which the narrator
says the message was "not the loss of Thurmond Call, but of something more
fundamental that people had felt themselves losing all along." The story goes
on to record many losses. Is there a character who does not lose something but
gains something during the course of this story? If so, is it because the
character is marked by a lack of expectations?
2. The narrator of the story remarks that "a newspaper story, like anything
else, is more attractive from a distance, when it comes to you, than it is when
you get close and agonize over the details." What are Ward, Yardley, and
Charlotte initially attracted to in the case of Hillary Van Wetter? What does
each character hope to gain from the case, and how is each disappointed as he
or she becomes familiar with the story's details?
3. Water is a powerful image throughout the book. Jack swims as a means of
healing, Ward dies in the ocean, and Jack distinctly recalls that he has never
seen his father wet. Discuss how each character is defined by his relationship
to water. How is it significant that the Van Wetter family lives in the
swamplands? And what does the author intend by placing the James family in a
county called Moat?
4. Discuss the similarities between Ward and Charlotte that drive them to
connect with destructive people, Yardley and Hillary Van Wetter respectively.
What do they have in common that would explain each one's self-destructive
behavior? What about them explains why one life ended in murder and one in
suicide?
5. Ward continually places himself in potentially violent situations, but, as
Jack points out, "those were not the things that frightened my brother." What
satisfaction does Ward gain from the threat of violence? In what situations is
Ward shown to be truly frightened, and what causes his fear?
6. Two generations of reporters are portrayed in this story. Jack observes
his father and his fellow editors and comments that "what moved them was not to
know things, but to tell them." How is Ward's approach to journalism
fundamentally different from his father's and what effect does this have on
their relationship?
7. Throughout the book, W.W. is disturbed by his disintegrating family, but
there is evidence that he is to blame for his isolation. What potentially
fruitful relationships does he neglect?
8. Charlotte calls Hillary an intact man. What does she mean by this? Is
there a point during her meetings with him when she realizes she is wrong? If
so, why does she marry him?
9. Jack reflects that Charlotte was left with a situation which while of her
own making, bore no resemblance to the one she had envisioned. Do you think
this is true of W.W. Ward, and Jack? What do you think each one envisioned for
himself, and how do you think he sees himself through the course of this
story?
10. More than anything else, W.W. looks forward to the moment he can hand the
newspaper over to his son Ward. How does the publication of Ward's story
affect this plan?
11. What do you think was the deciding factor in Ward's ultimate demise: the
rejection by his father, the beating he suffered and the exposure of his
homosexuality, or the aftermath of the Hillary Van Wetter investigation?
12. It has been said of Pete Dexter that "what deepens and darkens his writing
so that art is the precise word to describe it is a powerful understanding that
character rules, that we live with our weaknesses and die of our strengths"
(John Skow, Time). How is Ward's decline inextricably tied to his
strengths as a person and a reporter? Discuss this observation as it applies
to other characters in the book.
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