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Remembering Blue
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Remembering Blue


Fiction
Ballantine Books | Trade Paperback | May 2001 | $14.00 | 978-0-345-43924-6 (0-345-43924-4)



ABOUT THIS BOOK
''IMMEDIATELY REWARDING . . . BEAUTIFULLY WROUGHT . . . With narrator Mattie Blue, [Fowler] has created one of the wisest, wittiest, and most endearing young women found in contempo-rary fiction.''
--Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

''Remembering Blue is a hymn of praise to the breathtaking beauty of the Gulf Coast of Florida and the men and women who love that coast with every cell of their bodies. Nick Blue is an extraordinary creation, so life-affirming and vibrant that he makes you shiver with the pleasure of his maleness. The story of Nick and Mattie Blue centers this novel and makes it soar, the way great love stories are supposed to do.''

--PAT CONROY

Author of The Prince of Tides and Beach Music

''Touching . . . So detailed, so sensuous . . . Thanks to Fowler's muscular prose and ironic sense of humor, Mattie's story is no weepy eulogy, no pathetic exercise in wishful thinking; she's more about self-discovery than self-pity.''
--St. Petersburg Times

''If writing is a gift, then Connie May Fowler must have been bestowed with the gifts of ten muses.''
--AMY TAN
Author of The Joy Luck Club

''Remembering Blue will fill your soul with the power of love.''
--Santa Cruz Sentinel

''Fowler writes lyrically of the Florida coast. The love story carries strong appeal and Fowler's tender portrayal of Nick and Mattie's idyllic rela-tionship will please romantics everywhere.''
--Publishers Weekly

A FEATURED SELECTION OF THE BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB

FOR DISCUSSION

1. Why did the author choose to tell us in the very first paragraph that Mattie is a widow? How would the story have been different if she had told it in real time, instead of as a remembrance? How does her choice heighten the drama?

2. Talk about the mothers and the fathers in this novel, the ones who disappear and the ones who stay. Can you see a pattern? Is disappearing ever a valid choice for a parent?

3. Books save Mattie's life at different points in the novel. Talk about theses times and about how books are important to Mattie. From what you have seen of life, do people who experience books as escape or as salvation become more ferocious readers than people who experience books as entertainment?

4. In a sense, Nick and Mattie are in opposite evolutionary cycles. He is going back to what legend says he was. She is moving forward to become the fully integrated person she has it in her to be. Talk about the place where they meet, the moment in time when their cycles intersect.

5. One of the limits of first-person point of view is that the narrator is usually not reliable. How does the author work around this? Discuss some of the other point-of-view choices that the author makes. For instance, when she has Mattie shape-shift into Lillian and into Nick, telling their stories from an intimate, close angle; or when Mattie shifts to a distant third-person point of view to describe her own wed-ding. 6. Talk about the importance of myth and legend (Lethe, Proteus, the Sirens, Delphinus, Poseidon) in this novel.

7. Discuss the role and importance of nature in this novel.

8. For all of his humor, vitality, and pragmatism, Nick has a sadness about him from the start. Talk about instances where he displays this side of himself and how it foreshadows his coming death.

9. When they are in Tallahassee, Mattie tells Nick, ''If you left Lethe because you were scared of dying at sea, that's one thing. But if you left because you believed the legend just a tiny, tiny bit? Well, that's a whole different reason for leaving'' (63). Talk about the distinction she makes.

10. Mattie gets to Lethe and begins making a life for herself, with Nick, and on her own. She makes friends, she establishes comforting routines, and she takes on physical and intellectual challenges. Discuss the difference between this and when she was in Tallahassee on her own and went from studio apartment to convenience store and back again. Why does she blossom on Lethe?

11. Discuss Rhea and Charon Blue's relationship and Mattie's connection with Charon.

12. Mattie dreams of dolphins; Captain Johnny dreams of ships. Talk about the importance of specific dreams in this novel.

13. Talk about Mattie's reaction to her mother's death and then to her father's. She won't accept her parent's money (in the form of the house). And yet, she places the photo of her family alongside those of the Blue family. How do all these conflicting emotions and actions fit together? How are they justified?

14. Talk about the hurricane and the buildup to it. At this point in the novel, we're expecting Nick's death at any moment. How does our expectation add to the intensity of the hurricane? How does the hurricane add to the intensity of Nick's death?

15. Mattie imagines two versions of Nick's death, but discards one. Talk about how the author prepares us to accept one scenario over the other by having Mattie posit reasonable theories for unknowable events earlier in the novel.

16. Would the novel have been as satisfying if Nick's body had been found? Or did his body have to remain in the sea to make this story read true?

17. Do you think Mattie will stay on Lethe? Raise her child there? Remarry eventually?

Questions and Topics for Discussion are courtesy of Doubleday Publishing.





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