QUESTIONS FROM BOOK GROUPS


I get wonderful questions from readers' groups around the country. I want to share them with you--starting with my personal favorite question, the reason I wrote the book:

Having worked in the energy field, I'm still working on the answer to that one!


FROM A READERS' GROUP IN PALM DESERT, CALIFORNIA:

FROM A READERS GROUP IN KING OF PRUSSIA, PENNSYLVANIA:

"I recently started a book club for a group of friends. Our first book was The Eight, and we all loved it. This group consists of about 7 women, all under the age of 30."

FOLLOW-ON QUESTIONS WITH KATHERINE'S ANSWERS FROM DISCUSSION LEADER (KING OF PRUSSIA, PENNSYLVANIA):

FROM A READERS GROUP IN GLENVILLE, ILLINOIS, WITH KATHERINE'S ANSWERS:

"Every one in our book club enjoyed The Eight. It provided solid discussion for 1-1/2 hours! I did a lot of research on the French Revolution and discussed various characters, both fictional and real, however based in historical fiction. There were some outstanding questions, however, that we were wondering if you could answer or give us clues about...":

MORE FROM GLENVILLE IL:

"This is the second time I have read this book and I also gave it to my father to read. Thank you for writing it--it's fabulous entertainment!!"

FROM A READERS GROUP IN HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA:

The Discussion Group Leader writes: "Thank you so much for posting reader group questions for "The Eight" on your web site. Our group enjoyed discussing those questions and your response to the questions. I am sending you the questions I presented to my group. I can't wait for the sequel to come out !!"

KN: Neither can I!

Questions for book discussions of The Eight:

1. Which character do you identify with the most and why?

2. Which characters are similar, and which ones provide foils for other characters?Which characters from different centuries share many similar traits? Finally, how does each character prove to be an individual in their own right?

(A foil is a character that is the exact opposite of another close character. This foil not only shows different personalities at work but also emphasizes the extreme characteristics of each character. For example Mireille and Valentine are foils for each other. The careful Cat is very similar to the hesitant follower Mireille.)

3. Why do you think this book has so many strong women characters?

4. T.S Eliot says, "It is better to act wrongly and with conviction than to never act at all." Do you believe conviction and belief in ideals, however "good" or "evil" these ideals may be, is better than no ideals or convictions at all? More specifically, is Mirelle really a better person than, for example, Catherine the Great? What defines character? Who is to judge right or wrong? Is it better to make a huge mistake that you fully believe in and act upon, or never have any convictions but also never act?

Remember, Catherine the Great is a strong and independent woman who has worked hard to remain in the position she is in. She has many convictions and acts upon them. Mirelle is not strong, independent or powerful. She does the "good" thing, but not out of action or certainty. She simple does it because that is what she has been told to do and has never questioned it. Does that automatically make her a good person, and Catherine the Great an evil woman?

5. Powerful women in this book such as Lily and Catherine the Great use men just as well as men use them. They never fall for stupid romantic ploys or get caught up in unwise romantic choices. Why can these women do this -what have they discovered that Cat and Mirelle have not.?
Why does our society still condemn women like Catherine the Great, who want, pursue and obtain other things beside love and marriage and use men only for business or pleasure, but never for intellectual purposes, (much like men have used women for centuries)but still applaud men who have high-powered jobs and do not want love or marriage? Why is there such a double standard and why do modern women such as Cat never even think to question it? (Do you question it? What have you done about it?)

6. If this book was a piece of music or a work of art, what would it be and why?

KN:Wow! Interesting question! I will have to try to figure that out for myself!

7. What does power mean to different characters in this book and what does it mean to you? The people seeking the chess pieces believe they hold something- what? Why is finding the chess pieces a sort of salvation for the people in this book?

8. Discuss the metaphor of the chess game. Is it the game of life? (Duh.) But what do the pieces represent ? What are the players looking for, and what are they running from? Who are the players? Why are there intentional players (people who have chosen to play the game) and unintentional players (people who have fallen into the game). Are you an intentional or unintentional player? Why? Do you even want to be in the game?

9. What is the most dangerous idea in this book?

10. What words or phrases stuck out in your mind? Why did the author choose these particular words or phrases?

11. Why is Cat chosen to be the leader? What qualities make her special?

12. Why can some people handle power while others go crazy?