Register |
Login
search BB content:
Become a Clubie
Become a Clubie
Tour A Clubie Page
FAQs
Book Clubs
Book Clubs
Create Your Book Club
How A Book Club Works
Tour A Book Club
Find / Join A Book Club
BB Club House
Search Books
Search Books
Best Sellers
Teens Page
Kids Page
Discussion Questions
BB News
BB News
Sign-up for News Letter
Become A Contributor
PR
Authors
Authors FAQ
Authors News
'The Book Pick' Contest
Advertise with BookBundlz
Campaign for Literacy
Book Store
Book Store
Hot Finds
BookBundlz Stuff
Home
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
By Kim Edwards
Binding:
Paperback
Publisher:
Penguin (Non-Classics), (5/30/2006)
Language:
English
Average Rating:
Unleash it
3.60 out of 5 (5 Clubie's ratings)
Buy Now From
Kim Edwards’s stunning family drama evokes the spirit of Sue Miller and Alice Sebold, articulating every mother’s silent fear: what would happen if you lost your child and she grew up without you? In 1964, when a blizzard forces Dr. David Henry to deliver his own twins, he immediately recognizes that one of them has Down Syndrome and makes a split-second decision that will haunt all their lives forever. He asks his nurse to take the baby away to an institution and to keep her birth a secret. Instead, she disappears into another city to raise the child as her own. Compulsively readable and deeply moving,
The Memory Keeper’s Daughter
is an astonishing tale of redemptive love.
Like this book? Then you might also like these...
The Lake of Dreams
Kim Edwards
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
The Lake of Dreams: A Novel
Kim Edwards
Mean Little deaf Queer: A Memoir
Terry Galloway
The Used World: A Novel
Haven Kimmel
DawnRenee`'s
thoughts on "
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
"
updated on:
2/15/2012
Very Unleashable
Dianne's
thoughts on "
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
"
updated on:
7/21/2009
Kathy - February 11, 2007
Very Unleashable
lynnette's
thoughts on "
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
"
updated on:
5/26/2009
I loved this book.
DEFINITELY Unleash it
Laura Libro's
thoughts on "
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
"
updated on:
5/25/2009
Very Unleashable
Abby's
thoughts on "
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
"
updated on:
4/28/2009
Do not Unleash
"
The Memory Keeper's Daughter
"
By Kim Edwards
Average Rating:
Unleash it
3.60 out of 5 (5 Clubie's ratings)
May's BB Book Club Book Pick:
Life After Life
By Kate Atkinson
When David hands his baby girl over to Caroline and tells Norah that she has died, what was your immediate emotional reaction? At this early point, did you understand David’s motivations? Did your understanding grow as the novel progressed?
David describes feeling like “an aberration” within his own family (p. 7) and describes himself as feeling like “an imposter” in his professional life as a doctor (p. 8). Discuss David’s psyche, his history, and what led him to make that fateful decision on the night of his children’s birth.
When David instructs Caroline to take Phoebe to the institution, Caroline could have flatly refused or she could have gone to the authorities. Why doesn’t she? Was she right to do what she did and raise Phoebe as her own? Was Caroline morally obligated to tell Norah the truth right from the beginning? Or was her moral obligation simply to take care of Phoebe at whatever cost? Why does she come to Norah after David’s death?
Though David wanted no part of her, Phoebe goes on to lead a full life, bringing much joy to Caroline and Al. Her story calls into question how we determine what kind of life is worth living. How would you define such a life? In contrast to Phoebe’s, how would you describe the quality of Paul’s life as he grew up?
Throughout the novel, the characters often describe themselves as feeling as if they are watching their own lives from the outside. For instance, David describes the moment when his wife is going into labor and says “he felt strangely as if he himself were suspended in the room . . . watching them both from above” (p. 10). What do you think Edwards is trying to convey here? Have you ever experienced similar feelings in your own life?
There is an obvious connection between David and Caroline, most aptly captured by a particular moment described through David’s point of view: “Their eyes met, and it seemed to the doctor that he knew her—that they knew each other—in some profound and certain way” (p. 12). What is the significance of this moment for each of them? How would you describe the connection between them? Why do you think David married Norah and not Caroline?
After Norah has successfully destroyed the wasps’ nest, Edwards writes that there was something happening in Norah’s life, “an explosion, some way in which life could never be the same” (p. 139). What does she mean, and what is the significance of Norah’s “fight” with these wasps?
When David meets Rosemary (p. 267) it turns out to be a cathartic experience for him. What is it about her that enables David to finally speak the truth? Why does he feel compelled to take care of her?
The secret that David keeps is enormous and ultimately terribly destructive to himself and his family. Can you imagine a circumstance when it might be the right choice to shield those closest to you from the truth?
What do you think Norah’s reaction would have been if David had been honest with her from the beginning? How might Norah have responded to the news that she had a daughter with Down syndrome? How might each of their lives have been different if David had not handed Phoebe to Caroline that fateful day?
Clubie Submitted Discussion Questions
Have a good question? If your a clubie add one now.
Also, Don't Miss BB's
Author News Page!
Look for advice on everything from how to get your book published to promoted. We are looking to help you get the word out about your book!
Check out our...
of the Month