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Authors: Gail Godwin

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2. On
this page
, the narrator admits, “I won’t hire a detective to go in search of a real seventy-year old woman … But I will attend to what her image, playing its role in last night’s dream, came to tell me.” She then refers to the theater of her unconscious, “where each figure—based wholly or in part on some real person—has its function.” This is a good time to consider Godwin’s cast of characters, chosen for their special roles and symbolic weight. Can you imagine any characters with whom Justin might have engaged but whom Godwin weeded out? Are there any characters she included whom she could have left out?

3. When Aunt Mona dives to pick up a piece of food that Jem, Justin’s brother, had dropped at dinner, Justin gives her mother a look to distinguish “Our Way of Life” from “Theirs.” You can gain insight into the way of life represented in a novel’s universe by asking yourself what the book or its characters have to say about a variety of key topics: religion, politics, the arts and literature, mass media, social class, race, gender, aging, the natural world, human nature, sex, current events, community, crime and punishment, etc.

4. Adolescents do not write many great novels, so we have to trust adults to create adolescent states of mind retrospectively. How accurately does Godwin do it? What aspects of adolescence would an accurate portrait include? How is Justin the same as and different from other adolescents? Review Justin’s awareness of and involvement with sexuality, starting with the Cristiana poltroon farm. How many other adolescents are there in the novel (include the young Ursula!), and how do they fill out the picture?

5. When Justin receives her grandmother’s pearl necklace, initiating her into womanhood, she muses, “There was a lonely, mysterious side of myself I was just beginning to know, a side neither masculine nor feminine but quivering with intimations of mental and spiritual things.” Does the focus on sex stunt other developmental needs in teenagers?

6. There are some good passages for studying the nature of Justin’s confusion. On
this page
, you read that Justin goes up to the old farmhouse and paints an Ursula-like figure whom she then consults as an oracle. Upon returning home and being swallowed by circumstances there, her painted figure begins to look like one of the mindless milkmaids on her wallpaper—her newly forming self, she thinks. Can a person see his or her fate? How clearly does Justin do so?

7. Also, look at
this page
. Justin senses the magic of her visit to the DeVanes draining from her as Aunt Mona defends her. How many people are fighting for Justin’s allegiance? Who is Justin if she is not any of the people others think she is? On
this page
, Justin thinks she might be a monster manipulating others in order to get her mother to move back to Virginia. Could she be a monster? Where does her goodness lie? This is a question that the grown-up Justin asks on
this page
as she looks back at her fourteen-year-old self. Why does she say, at this point, that she needs to go back and claim the girl she had been?

8. Make a list of the music cited in the novel, get the recordings, and play them. How do they affect your experience of reading and remembering the novel, if at all?

9. Satire lovers, how much satire can you take? How much satire is there in
The Finishing School
? Does it serve its role well? Would you want more? If there were more, how would that change the novel? Can you think of a novel that has a lot more satire in it? What is that novel missing that
The Finishing School
has. Look at the first instance of satire in
The Finishing School
, on
this page
through
this page
. (Also, see other satiric passages on
this page
,
this page
-
this page
,
this page
-
this page
,
this page
, and
this page
-
this page
.) Notice
how Godwin introduces Aunt Mona’s household—with a seemingly banal conversation that, nonetheless, introduces a lot of information and thematic notes.

10. We know that when Godwin introduces a subplot or anecdote, it has a double edge. For example, late in the book, Ursula makes Justin question the admirability of her grandfather’s statement about his wife—“the only woman … who would behave exactly the same way if nobody were looking.” Note the subplots in the novel and puzzle over their double meaning. You can start with the story of how Justin’s mother had eloped (
this page
-
this page
).

11. If you were to write a story in the manner of Gail Godwin, what would be the features you would include? In the preceding interview, Godwin says that one of her major motivations for writing is to understand what goes on in others’ minds. In what ways is empathy an active attribute of Godwin’s characters as well as of herself as narrator?

12. How do characters who are good at empathy fare and how do ones who are not? Look at Aunt Mona and the wallpaper and curtains she puts in Justin’s room as an act of empathy. Look at Justin’s mother and judge whether she is indeed to be condemned for not knowing her daughter’s mind. Look at Ursula and her uses of empathy. Rate characters on their levels of empathy. See if you agree with your fellow readers.

13. In representing characters’ states of mind, Godwin does not stick to linear narrative. How would you represent a character’s mental activity? (Try tracking your own.) Find a passage in which Godwin uses flashbacks, reflections, wishes, and actions to dramatize a character. Do you find this exciting? Pleasing? If you take out everything but the drama, with what do you end up, greater or lesser suspense?

14. Justin moves from a Virginia town to an upstate New York one. Godwin lives in New York State, but grew up in the South. Is she a Southern writer? Does her writing have Southern qualities, or does she represent the South in her work? (See
this page
.)

15. How would you interpret the dream about the magician and the grass-overgrown house on
this page
?

16. Look at a passage of dialogue—
this page
through
this page
, for instance. What are the dynamics? Godwin lets you examine how people jockey for position through their conversation, no matter how light it is. How do they do so in this passage? Justin’s mother tells the story
about Justin’s experience at a riding stable. The owner advises Justin to let the horse know who’s boss, and Justin replies, “Oh, he already knows, sir.” As with horses, so with people, no?

17. Somehow, you’re going to have to deal with the character of Abel Cristiana. Try to remember as many things as you can about him. Is he a bully? (See
this page
.) Why is Ursula attracted to him? What do you make of his World War II experiences (
this page
)?

18. Godwin says that she keeps track of her characters so that no major character ends up sitting offstage too long. After a while, a character has to assert him- or herself. When and how does Justin’s mother assert herself? Does she assert herself enough? See
Chapter IV
, for instance.

19. Would you call
The Finishing School
a symbolic novel? For instance, there are the birthday presents Justin gets—the blue bottle (from Ursula) and her grandmother’s pearl necklace (from her mother). These are intentionally symbolic items. What about dream symbolism? Finally, what about the symbolism of actual things, such as the demolished farmhouse and the murky pond? Don’t be literary, be real. Does symbolism have an effect on people’s lives?

20. What’s the deal with Ursula’s first lover, the European with the same family name? Does the DeVane family have a condition, inflicted by history? What does Justin mean, on
this page
, when she says that dining with the DeVanes was like “being abducted into a community of ghosts”? How does this aspect of the story compare to Edgar Allan Poe’s “Fall of the House of Usher”?

21. Mr. Mott, as a character, comes to life late in the book. Did you dismiss him as an uninteresting character at first? Do you believe that any character—or person—can make an interesting subject for a story? What might be interesting about Joan Dibble?

22.
Chapter VII
is a good chapter to look at to see how Godwin uses foreshadowing (see
this page
and
this page
). Grown-up Justin returns to the scene of the “crime” and gives hints about things to come. Why does Godwin leave the big revelation until the end—for just dramatic reasons? Is it so terrible that Justin can’t admit it? What might be the parts that Justin can’t bring herself to admit?

23. Have you ever known a brilliantly manipulative person? What techniques did he or she use? Does Ursula use those tricks? Can you be attracted to such a person and hold your own?

24. Writing experts say that the most important element in a story is voice, and that the most important element in voice is authority. You’ve got to believe and trust your main speaker. But what if there is more than one main speaker? Do any voices compete with Justin’s for authority? What other voices made an impression on you in
The Finishing School
? Ursula takes over the first-person voice for a good portion of
Chapter IX
and
Chapter X
. How would it be if she had narrated the novel? Where do you think she ended up?

25. Do you agree with Ursula’s need for perpetual youth and her motto, “As long as you yearn, you can’t congeal”?

26. On
this page
, Ursula confesses to Justin that her mother haunts her and she feels condemned to relive her mother’s life. Is this a common condition, being haunted and falling into a fateful pattern? Can you see it in yourself? Does
The Finishing School
give us warnings about what may happen to us, or models on how people break away from such influences?

27. Does Godwin draw special significance from the double meaning of the word “finishing” in “the finishing school”?

28. Starting on
this page
, when Justin considers how she might have responded differently than she did to Julian’s despairing talk, do you see any paths for her other than the one that the plot (fate?) requires?

To the Ursulas of this world,
whoever they were—or weren’t.

Also by Gail Godwin

FICTION

Evenings at Five: A Novel and Five Stories
Evensong
The Good Husband
Father Melancholy’s Daughter
A Southern Family
Mr. Bedford and the Muses
(short stories)
A Mother and Two Daughters
Violet Clay
Dream Children
(short stories)
The Odd Woman
Glass People
The Perfectionists

NONFICTION

Heart: A Natural History of the Heart-Filled Life

Gail Godwin
is the three-time National Book Award nominee and bestselling author of eleven critically acclaimed novels, including
A Mother and Two Daughters, Violet Clay, Father Melancholy’s Daughter
, and
Evensong.
She has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts grant for both fiction and libretto writing, and the Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. She has written libretti for ten musical works with the composer Robert Starer. Currently she is writing her twelfth novel,
Queen of the Underworld.

Visit her Web site at
www.gailgodwin.com
.

“[A] tender story of a relationship that defies the grave.”

The New York Times Book Review

EVENINGS AT FIVE

A novel and five stories
by GAIL GODWIN

Every evening at five o’clock, Christina and Rudy began the ritual commonly known as Happy Hour, sharing drinks along with a love of language and music (she is an author, he a composer, after all), a delight in intense conversation, a fascination with popes, and nearly thirty years of life together. Now, seven months after Rudy’s unexpected death, Christina reflects on their vibrant bond—with all its quirks, habits, and unguarded moments—as well as her passionate sorrow and her attempts to reposition herself and her new place in the very real world they shared.

Published by Ballantine Books
Now available in paperback wherever books are sold

The Guide’s inside, so it’s perfect for your reading group.
www.BallantineBooks.com/BRC

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