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Plainsong
by Kent Haruf
- 0-375-70585-6
- 320 pages
- $13.00 (Can. $20.00)
"A novel so foursquare, so delicate and lovely, that it has power to exalt the reader."
--Verlyn Klinkenborg, The New York Times
More about the Book
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About this guide
The questions, discussion topics, and suggested reading list that follow are
intended to enhance your group's reading of Kent Haruf's Plainsong. We hope they
will provide you with new angles from which to approach and discuss this powerful
tale of seven lonely lives set on the stark but beautiful High Plains of
Colorado.
In the small town of Holt, Tom Guthrie, a high school teacher, fights to keep his
life together and to raise his two boys after their depressed mother first
retreats into her bedroom, and then moves away to her sister's house. The boys,
not yet adolescents, struggle to make sense of adult behavior and their mother's
apparent abandonment. A pregnant teenage girl, kicked out by her mother and
rejected by the father of her child, searches for a secure place in the world.
And far out in the country, two elderly bachelor brothers work the family farm as
they have their entire lives, all but isolated from life beyond their own
community.
From these separate strands emerges a vision of life--and of the community and
landscape that bind them together--that is both luminous and enduring.
Plainsong is a story of the abandonment, grief, and stoicism that bring
these people together, and it is a story of the kindness, hope, and dignity that
redeem their lives. Utterly true to the rhythms and patterns of life,
Plainsong is an American classic: a novel to care about, believe in, and
learn from.
For discussion
- Why might Kent Haruf have chosen Plainsong as the title for this novel? What meaning, or meanings, does the title have in relation to Haruf's story and characters?
- How does Haruf characterize the landscape of Holt and its surroundings, and how does he use landscape to set the emotional scene? In what ways are his characters shaped and formed by the land around them?
- Few hints are given in the novel about what life might have been like for the Guthrie family before Ella left. What do you imagine that life to have been like? What sort of a marriage did Tom and Ella have, and what made it go wrong? What might account for Ella's nearly total withdrawal even from the children she seems to love?
- How do the three teenagers having sex in the abandoned house inform and affect Ike and Bobby? What does this sight tell them about sex? About love? About the relationships and power struggle between men and women?
- Do you believe there are marked differences between Raymond and Harold McPheron? If so, what are they?
- Why do you think the McPheron brothers have chosen to spend their lives together rather than start families of their own? Are they lonely or unhappy before Victoria's arrival, or do they feel sufficient in themselves? What does Maggie mean when she tells them, "This is your chance" [p. 110]?
- What parallels can you draw between the McPheron brothers and the young Guthrie boys? Why is the relationship so close in each case? What sort of a future do you see for the Guthrie boys? Do you think they will marry and have families?
- The McPheron brothers think they know nothing about young girls. Is that the case? Has their solitary life close to the earth handicapped them so far as human relations go, or has it, in fact, provided them with hidden advantages?
- What examples of parents abandoning children--either by desertion, emotional withdrawal, or death--can be found in this novel? What do these incidents have in common? How does abandonment affect children, and how does it shape their lives and relationships?
- It is usually women who are portrayed as nurturers, but in this novel, men--Tom Guthrie and the McPheron brothers--provide shelter and comfort. How do men differ from women in this respect? What do these men offer that a woman might not be able to?
- "These are crazy times," Maggie Jones says. "I sometimes believe these must be the craziest times ever" [p. 124]. What does she mean by this? In what way are our times "crazier" than earlier eras? How does such "craziness" affect the lives of young people such as Victoria, Ike, and Bobby?
- What motives and feelings might have driven Tom to sleep with Judy when it was really Maggie he was interested in? Why might Maggie have seemed momentarily frightening or intimidating to him?
- Why do the Guthrie boys befriend Iva Stearns? What are they looking for in this tentative friendship? Do they find what they are seeking?
- Why do the Guthrie boys go to the McPheron brothers after Iva's death rather than to someone closer to home, like their father or Maggie? Is there any indication that they connect Iva's death with their mother's abandonment? Why do they place their mother's bracelet on the train tracks, then bury it?
- The inhabitants of Holt and its surroundings are extremely laconic: they speak only sparingly, as though they mistrust words. What might cause this? In what way does it affect the characters' relationships with one another?
- How would you describe Holt, Colorado? What are its limitations, its disadvantages, and what are its strengths? In what ways is it typical of any American small town, and in what ways is it different? What help does it provide for people who need healing, like the characters in this book?
- Plainsong depicts some unusual "family" groups. How might Kent Haruf define family?
For general discussion of Kent Haruf's works
- How does Kent Haruf's writing style change from his first novel to his last, the National Book Award finalist Plainsong? What is the effect of Haruf's style in each and use of language on the reader?
- How does the small town of Holt figure as a character in each novel? How are the characters in each of the novels completely believable and different? How does Haruf repeat some character traits in his novels and to what effect? How do the characters and the image of the town change from book to book?
Also by Kent Haruf, available in paperback from Vintage Contemporaries
- The Tie That Binds
"An impressive, expertly crafted work of sensitivity and detail. Powerful."
--Los Angeles Times Book Review
In his critically acclaimed first novel The Tie That Binds, Kent Haruf
delivers the sweeping tale of Edith, a daughter of the American High Plains, as
told by her neighbor, Sanders Roscoe. As Roscoe shares what he knows, Edith's
tragedies unfold: a childhood of pre-dawn chores, a mother's death, a violence
that leaves a father dependent on his children, forever enraged. Here is the
story of a woman who sacrifices her happiness in the name of family
obligation--and then, in one gesture, reclaims her freedom. The Tie That Binds is
a powerfully eloquent tribute to the arduous demands of days gone by, and of the
tenacity of the human spirit.
- Where You Once Belonged
"A beautifully told parable--simple and stark and true." --Newsday
In Where You Once Belonged Kent Haruf tells of a small town hero who is dealt an
enviable hand and cheats with all the cards. Burdette is a high school football
star who wins the heart of the loveliest girl in the county and the admiration of
men twice his age. Fun loving and independent, Burdette engages in the occasional
prank. But when the boy turns into a man, his high jinks turn into crimes--with
unspeakable consequences. Now, eight years later, Burdette has returned to commit
his greatest trespass of all. And the good people of Holt County may not be able
to stop him. Deftly plotted, defiantly honest, Where You Once Belonged sings the
song of a wounded prairie community in a narrative with the earmarks of a modern
American classic.
Suggestions for further reading
Sherwood Anderson, Winesburg, Ohio; Willa Cather, My Ántonia; William Faulkner,
Sanctuary, The Sound and the Fury; Charles Frazier, Cold Mountain; David
Guterson, Snow Falling on Cedars; Ernest Hemingway, In Our Time; Harper Lee, To
Kill a Mockingbird; William Maxwell, So Long, See You Tomorrow; Cormac McCarthy,
The Border Trilogy; Carson McCullers, The Ballad of the Sad Café, The Heart is a
Lonely Hunter; Rohinton Mistry, A Fine Balance; William Styron, Lie Down in
Darkness; Anne Tyler, The Accidental Tourist, Ladder of Years; Eudora Welty, The
Golden Apples, The Optimist's Daughter.
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