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Authors: Lily King

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He smelled, even in California, of maple syrup. Vida held him and let him hold her. She felt herself opening, her whole being spreading not just over Tom but over the yard, over the orchard behind her, over the palms clicking in the wind. Over the Dodge which had carried her so many places. Over her son, her very own son, watching at the window. She pressed her mouth to the warm stubble on the back of Tom’s neck. Desire rose easily. He’d waited, and had come when she asked. And yet she did not feel as Tess had felt when Angel finally came. Unlike Tess, her urge was not to die.
This happiness was too much,
Tess said.
I have had enough.
But Vida had not had near enough. Oh God, she thought, nearly unable to reckon with the vastness of the moment. This is it and I am right here. This is what there is.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

EVERYONE IN MY LIFE HAS HAD A HAND IN HELPING ME WRITE THIS BOOK.
Thank you to each one of you. I would still be stuck in chapter nine without the extraordinary help of Judith Burwell, who opened all the doors and windows. I am grateful for the support and encouragement of my writers’ group: Susan Conley, Debra Spark, Anja Hanson, and Sara Corbett. I am indebted to the following people for all their help: Sue Loomis, Fabiola Parra, Alix Bowman, Tina Barber, Paula Price, Nidia Restrepo, Holly Adams, and Hannah McCain. I’d also like to thank my mother, Don Lee, Maryanne O’Hara, Ann and Jack Cobb, Anita Demetropoulos, Cornelia Walworth, Cammie McGovern, Lisa Adams, and Becky Dilworth. And I need to acknowledge a real-life high school English teacher, Tony Paulus, who introduced me to both literature and creative writing, and without whom I would never have begun writing stories. I am blessed with a fantastic agent, Wendy Weil, and an exceptionally talented editor, Elisabeth Schmitz, who speaks my language, only better.

I need to give a special thanks to Susan Conley who, in a true act of friendship, somehow managed to read my manuscript twice in one week despite her responsibilities as teacher, writer, and mother of two small boys. Her feedback was invaluable to me. And to my husband, Tyler, who listened, and read, and made me go on when I wanted to give up. And to my daughters, Calla and Eloise, for their love and understanding, and for the expression on their faces when they took turns holding the pile of pages that night I finished.

A GROVE PRESS READING GROUP GUIDE

The English Teacher
Lilly King

ABOUT THIS GUIDE

We hope that these discussion questions
will enhance your reading group’s exploration
of Lily King’s
The English Teacher
. They are
meant to stimulate discussion, offer new viewpoints,
and enrich your enjoyment of the book.

More reading group guides and additional information, including
summaries, author tours, and author sites for
other fine Grove Press titles, may be found on
our Web site,
www.groveatlantic.com
.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

1. At the heart of the novel is the quest of Vida to find truth through fiction. The epigraph for
The English Teacher,
“Life is beginning. I now break into my hoard of life,” is from Virginia Woolf. How would you describe Vida as an English teacher? What are her strengths? What are her dramatic limitations? What distinguishes an English teacher from other teachers? Does living in the world of books hamper Vida, or does it expand her experience? Do the students of an imaginative English teacher—and readers of good books—suspend disbelief in order to grow or live on multiple levels?
2. Why does Vida hate teaching
Tess of the D’Urbervilles
? Why is she afraid of Peter reading it? (See pages 33–38.) What is perverse about her students’ taking the book to their hearts, adding it to Mrs. Avery’s legendary status? How does the teaching of the novel continue to correlate with events in the book? See the last page, for instance.
3. Peter is largely resistant to his mother’s obsession with literature. He feels held at arm’s length by her retreats into poetry and fiction. Is that a fair assessment on his part? Describe one time when he, too, understands something better, more immediately, by recalling a poem.
4. “Memory does its work underground. Beneath consciousness, a past moment finds its kin all at once. Like a fish returned to its school, it frolics in remembered waters, and stirs up others. … Yet even awful, unlivable memories want to be relived; the fragments yearn to be whole once more” (p. 103). For Vida the “unlivable memory” is always near the surface as well as beneath consciousness. Does the passage evoke other characters, too? Have you known people who, like Vida, are disabled by earlier traumas? (For instance, there has been great attention recently to people’s retrieved memories of childhood abuse. Do you give any credence to those who say, “Let it go—just get on with your life”?) How is Peter an inciting force for Vida’s dealing fully with her rape?
5. “‘Vida’s a hoot, isn’t she?’ Peter heard Tom’s brother say to him at the door. ‘She is,’ Tom said, confused, like he’d bought an appliance with too many features” (p. 94). How does Tom try and fail and then ultimately succeed in understanding and winning the complex, educated, and wounded Vida? What are the qualities that serve him in the end? Can you think of particular moments that show his generosity and strength? Think of his burying Walt, sharing his workshop with Peter, confronting Vida about her drinking. Others? What about the yellow dress?
6. “She figured that all marriages, if they lasted, ended up here in the land of quiet regret” (p. 152). We remember that this is Vida’s first try at marriage. What have been her observations about the institution so far? About her school
colleagues? About her own parents? It is their strains that drive her to find a new reality in books. Vida is tantalized by the Hardy poem in which a young man is lured by his ideal of love, “not by the poor girl he has been projecting his illusions onto” (p. 105). Vida feels Tom is always asking, “Why aren’t you who I thought you were?” (p. 104). Is Tom unrealistic in his hopes for Vida? Are there other characters who idealize someone in the book? Does King suggest that bedrock reality (disillusionment?) is a requirement for a strong marriage? Or is it a starting point for a mature relationship of any kind?
7. What is Peter’s preoccupation with Mary Belou, the phantom mother in his new house? (Peter also wonders if his own mysterious father is dead and waiting for him—when that figure is not raking leaves!) What is it that Peter needs from the now mythologized Mary? (See page 101.) Is there some resolution for him later?
8. Recall some scenes of both lively humor and poignancy. For example, think of Peter’s getting trapped in the nuptial bedroom (p. 28), wild to escape this lunatic moment. And Vida, true to form, in her schoolroom faced down by Tom, “grew bored by his performance. She had the impulse to get up and grade a few papers until he had finished” (p. 148). Can you think of other funny moments, all the sharper because they ring true to human nature?
9. What is it about the hostages that both compels and reflects the characters in the novel? It is one of the few issues that gets the family involved in something beyond themselves. How have the characters themselves been held hostage? For instance, when they are fleeing across the country, Peter reflects, “It wasn’t just her silence for the past four days but her silence all of his life” (p. 209). How does it take many levels of diplomacy, perseverance, and perhaps luck to release the hostages that are the people in this book?
10. Discuss the varied angles of vision in the novel. How do we learn about Vida, for instance, other than through her own thoughts and actions? We know that characters perceive external reality through their own lenses and needs. Give some examples. How do we know whom to trust? One surprise is the diner waitress who observes and reflects on a young boy and an old woman. How does this section add to our knowledge of Peter and Vida’s odyssey? Elsewhere, which are the most interesting shifts in points of view?
11. How is Walt a touchstone for the family? Older than Peter, where did he come from? And how is he important to the pivotal events of chapter seven?
12. Would you say that perhaps the central drama, the conflict that needs to be resolved, is the one between Vida and Peter? Is it this relationship that finally allows others to fall into place?
13. King is unorthodox in many ways, not intimidated by convention in her novel. Does Vida reflect this originality, particularly King’s gimlet eye? When? What
other characters show odd and fresh human reactions? For instance, when Tom is questioning Peter about Vida, the boy “wished they didn’t have to talk about her. He wished he just lived with the Belous without her getting in the way” (p. 127). When else does King reveal dead-on observations or memories of what it’s like to be a teenager, in school, at home, or at parties?
14. Mary Karr, writer of memoirs and poetry, has defined a dysfunctional family as “any family with more than one person in it.” Is that definition apt for King’s book? How do parents and children fail one another in
The English Teacher
? What do they have to risk to grow closer? What are the added challenges of the stepfamily? Is this ultimately the way it is with families: intricate webs, interwoven, fragile, tenacious, voracious, and beautiful?
15. How does style reveal substance in chapter twelve (pp. 213–15)? Does Vida’s internal dialogue, recollecting Joyce, put us inside her breakdown? And what about her aimlessness, paranoia, and nighttime panic attacks? How does she begin to work her way out?
16. What does California represent in the book, as opposed to Texas or New England? How is it important to Gena? Stuart? Peter? Vida? Fran? Tom? When do you begin to suspect that freedom is a central theme? (Is it logical that Vida’s fear of killing her son is tied up with her own need to be free? Of what?)
17. How well do we know Stuart and Fran? Is it mostly through Peter’s eyes? Do the brother and sister change in the book? Remember the scene where Peter revolves the picture cube in the living room, trying to find out who Stuart is. From early days Peter longed for siblings, to be part of a family. He hoped his mother’s marriage “meant, ultimately, a real union, a true synthesis, without any loose ends” (p. 27). Is this goal achieved in the end? For everyone?
18. “It was all about courage. To live even a day on this earth required courage. All those things they read in school—
The Odyssey, Beowulf, Huckleberry Finn
—were all about courage but the teacher never said, You may not have to kill a Cyclops or a dragon but you will need just as much courage to get through the day” (p. 236). What are times when courage is particularly required of people in this book? Is it a quality that can be learned? Do characters help each other find it?

SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING

Tess of the d’Ubervilles
and
Far from the Madding Crowd
by Thomas Hardy;
To the Lighthouse
and
Mrs. Dalloway
by Virginia Woolf;
The Evening of the Holiday
and
The Transit of Venus
by Shirley Hazzard; all books by Alice Munro;
Pride and Prejudice
and
Sense and Sensibility
by Jane Austen;
Light in August
and
Absalom, Absalom!
by William Faulkner;
The Scarlet Letter
by Nathaniel Hawthorne;
A Room with a
View
and
Howards End
by E. M. Forster;
The Gate of Angels
by Penelope Fitzgerald;
Independent People
by Halldor Laxness;
The Man Who Loved Children
by Christina Stead;
The Centaur
by John Updike;
Beloved
by Toni Morrison;
Dusk and Other Stories
by James Salter;
Disgrace
by J. M. Coetzee;
Atonement
by Ian McEwan;
Bel Canto
by Ann Patchett;
At Weddings and Wakes
and
Child of My Heart
by Alice McDermott;
Housekeeping
by Marilynne Robinson;
Amy and Isabelle
by Elizabeth Strout;
The Solace of Leaving Early
by Haven Kimmel;
The Pleasing Hour
by Lily King

Table of Contents

Cover page

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

SEVEN

EIGHT

NINE

TEN

ELEVEN

TWELVE

THIRTEEN

FOURTEEN

FIFTEEN

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

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