|
The Given Day
Reading Guide
From the New York Times bestselling author comes
a beautifully written
novel set in Boston at the end of the Great War. The Given Day is
an unflinching, utterly spectacular family epic that captures the political
unrest of a nation dangling between a well-patterned past and an unpredictable
future.
Questions for Discussion
- The Given Day transports readers to 1918 Boston and
touches on the lives of two families--one black, one white--as they are
swept up in the maelstrom of history. How are their experiences similar?
How are they different?
- Dennis Lehane writes The Given Day from the
perspectives of two very different men. What brings Luther Laurence and
Danny Coughlin together? Does their friendship ring true?
- One of the themes of the book is the notion of
family--both the blood kind and the kind a person willingly creates on his
own. How are these ideas of family manifested? Do you see one as being
more important than the other? Can a person belong to two kinds of family
at the same time?
- The Given Day centers on the Boston Police Strike
of 1919 at a time when fiercely held convictions about work and freedom
underwent enormous change at great cost to human life and relationships.
Nearly a century later, what is the role of unions in America today? How
do the working conditions for Luther and Danny compare to contemporary
conditions? Do you think unions are necessary today?
- How do the themes in the book—race, politics, class,
family, immigration, nepotism, corruption—reflect issues facing America
today?
- Injustice is another theme that Lehane explores in the
novel. How does injustice manifest itself in democratic societies? Can it
be redressed? If so, how?
- What role does Babe Ruth play in the narrative? What did
the introduction of his character add to your understanding of the novel’s
main themes?
- Who do you think is the most sympathetic character in the
story? Why?
- What is the relationship between Danny Coughlin and his
brothers Connor and Joe? What role does Danny play in each character’s
development? How do they, in turn, influence him?
- Talk about the relationship of Danny and his father. How
are they alike? How are they different? How do their similarities and
differences shape their relationship?
- What role do women play in the novel? How do they impact
the men?
- How are anarchists and immigrants portrayed in the novel?
Do you see any echoes of the government’s response to events then in the
America in which we live today?
- Consider your own life experiences. How would you have
fared in the America of a century ago? If Danny and Luther were
transported to 21st-century America, what might they think of our world?
About the Author
Dennis Lehane was born and raised in
Dorchester, Massachusetts. He is the author of A Drink Before the War, Darkness,
Take My Hand; Sacred; Gone, Baby, Gone; Prayers for Rain; and the New York
Times bestsellers Mystic River and Shutter Island. He is also the
author of the bestselling Coronado, a collection of five stories and a
play.
Before becoming a
full-time writer, Lehane worked as a counselor with mentally handicapped and
abused children, waited tables, parked cars, drove limos, worked in bookstores,
and loaded tractor-trailers. He lives with his wife Angie and four dogs in
Boston and the west coast of Florida.
|