1.
The novel begins with the heart-wrenching scene of a father abandoning his daughter in the harsh Australian Outback. What would drive a parent to leave his child? Do you believe the father's intent was for her to perish? As she was found in an area of only “saltbush an' dust,” where do you think they traveled from?
2.
Ghan, the crippled mine worker, has had a lonely existence of scars and hardship. Yet, through his actions, we are exposed to both the rough and tender sides of the man. Do you find him a vulnerable character and, if so, why? Do you believe people are born with innate traits of compassion or is this an acquired emotion? If you met Ghan in real life, would you be afraid of him?
3.
When the injured child is brought to Mirabelle's boardinghouse, she is surrounded by strangers and does not speak, exists within the house as a ghost. But when she saw Ghan again, she touched his hand and “looked at him as if she thought him beautiful.” Do you think she was simply grateful for Ghan saving her life or do her feelings go deeper? Do you think she sees something in him below the scars and distorted features? Do you think she would have wanted to remain at the boardinghouse if given the choice?
4.
Upon the cliffs of the orphanage James and Leonora develop an unlikely friendship and an unbreakable bond. Why do you think they were so drawn to each other? What did each gain from the other?
5.
James chooses to leave the orphanage, the only home he has ever known, in order to live with his Irish relatives, the O'Reillys. The land and work are hard and James grows up in poverty. Did James make the right decision in leaving the orphanage? Do you think Father McIntyre would have committed suicide if James had not left?
6.
Leonora's life with the Fairfields is filled with abundant wealth and loneliness, her childhood spent under the threat of being abandoned yet again. Her only taste of freedom comes from working with the wounded soldiers at the hospital. Could Leonora have done anything to change her lot? Could she have run away or acted out? Once a legal adult, did she have any real power?
7.
By marrying Alex, Leonora can finally escape the confines of the Fairfields' grip, even if it means she must live with a man she does not love. Did Leonora have any other choice but to marry Alex? With so little love in her own life, would it be difficult for her to know true love or what it would feel like?
8.
After James's aunt passes away, he is left to face the wrath of Shamus until the Shelbys fold him into their home as if he had always belonged there. Why didn't James ever retaliate against Shamus's beatings? Would James have survived if the Shelbys hadn't rescued him?
9.
When Leonora returns to Australia to her new home at Wanjarri Downs, she is reborn in a senseâ“She was Australia. Its air was her air, its cells her own.” Given that her early years in Australia were not favorable, why does she feel such a longing for the country?
10.
James and Leonora finally reunite at Wanjarri Downs, but the first meetings are uncomfortable and tense. Do you think the attraction was instant? How had they both changed since the orphanage? Whose upbringing had been more difficult?
11.
When Leonora and Alex return to Pittsburgh for her aunt's funeral, she learns the truth about Eleanor Fairfield's past. Does this explain why Eleanor treated Leonora the way she did? Do you believe Eleanor truly loved Leonora? Is this enough reason for Leonora to forgive her aunt for her traumatic upbringing?
12.
When Alex learns of Leonora's pregnancy and her affair with James, a series of violent events unfold, leaving Leonora in grief over the loss of her child and the apparent death of her true love, James. Why does Leonora still stay at Wanjarri Downs? Does she believe Alex murdered James? How did these events “awaken” her?
13.
When James heals from his wounds and struggles against death, he realizes that he is not an orphan but “the son of many.” Do you think this is true? Do you think this realization finally heals his emotional wounds? Was it necessary for him to go through the violence and near-death experience in order to heal the scars of his past?
14.
As Ghan approaches death, he is gripped with fear and grief until a soft inner voice and angelic image of a little girl guide him gently to his end. Why do you think Ghan's and Leonora's paths continued to cross? Do you believe the connection was coincidence or spiritual? Was Ghan her guardian angel?
15.
James and Leonora are finally home. They have adopted children of their own and built the life together that they had always dreamed of. Does it make all their hardships worth it? Do you have examples in your own life where the darkest of days brought the brightest future?