Book Details
Berkley Trade
Paperback, 304 pages
$14.00
ISBN-13: 978-0425184943
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Blue Diary

Discussion Guide

1. In Blue Diary, Alice Hoffman uses imagery from the natural world to mirror events that take place in the lives of her characters. Why is it portentous when she writes in Chapter One that lilies "only last for a single day, and then, no matter what a person might do to save them, they are fated, by God, or circumstance, or nature, to fade away?" What else in the novel is as ephemeral as the lilies Hoffman describes?

2. Things are not always as they seem in Monroe, Massachusetts. Do the beautiful people in the novel have more to hide than those who are less physically blessed? What do you think Hoffman might be trying to say about physical beauty?

3. Why does Kat "save" Rosarie from running away with Ethan, if she knows it will mean she will be compared to her beautiful sister forever?

4. Kat asserts that her decision to report Ethan to the police had nothing to do with the loss of her own father. Do you believe her? Why or why not?

5. Why does Jorie, after reading Rachel Morris's last diary entry, decide to leave Ethan, and her hometown, behind? What does James Morris mean when he says Jorie will know what to do if she reads the diary?

6. Loyalty and devotion are important themes in Blue Diary. Do you think Jorie shows sufficient loyalty to her husband?

7. Charlotte Kite endures divorce, the loss of both her parents in high school, and breast cancer, but she finds true love with Barney Stark. Jorie leads a charmed life until her husband's heinous crimes are revealed. Which woman has had to endure more?

8.  Should the deeds from our past be used to judge us in the present? Does benevolent behavior in the recent past "undo" reprehensible behavior from long ago?