Saturday, March 13, 2010

Plan for tomorrow

Okay, I checked out that Google Wave thing...apparently it's not up and running quite yet, but it sounds like that would be perfect to use for the future. For tomorrow I have posted some questions below, and let's use MSN Messenger to answer them and discuss. Then those that aren't going to make it tomorrow can answer the questions on the blog, and post comments, etc. Andrea, do you have Messenger?
Rain, is there any time that we could do it so Les can join in? What is the time difference there?

HERE WE GO..

Introduction

Jeannette Walls’s grandmother Lily Casey Smith is the kind of woman who built this country: resourceful, hardworking, and smart. Full of spunk and with a strong will to do whatever she puts her mind to, she can break a wild horse by the time she is six years old. At age fifteen, she leaves home to teach in a frontier town, riding five hundred miles across New Mexico with nothing but her pony for company and her pearl-handled revolver for protection. She tries living and working in Chicago, where she meets her first husband, but betrayal and loss soon drive her back to ranch life—caring for livestock and respecting the land are what she does best. Together, she and her second husband manage a 180,000-acre ranch and Lily uses her incredible pluck and ingenuity to supplement their meager income. They raise two children, one of whom is Jeannette Walls’s mother, Rosemary Smith Walls. With little more than Lily’s resourcefulness to guide the way, the family will weather tornadoes, droughts, floods, personal tragedy, and the Great Depression. In this tale of extreme hardship emerges a story of one woman whose spirit can’t be broken.


1. Lily seems willing to sacrifice everything to defend her principles and the rights of others. On more than one occasion, she is fired from a teaching position for refusing to back down from what she believes in. Do you applaud Lily’s moral conviction in these instances? Or did you hope that Lily would learn to compromise?

2. Lily has high expectations for her children, from sending them off to boarding school despite their protests to enforcing strict rules for keeping animals as pets. When Rosemary falls in love with a wild horse and asks her mother if she can keep it, Lily replies, “The last thing we need around here is another half-broke horse” (pg. 190). How might this statement apply to Lily’s children as well? Are Lily’s expectations of her children particularly high or rather a reflection of the times? Why do you think this phrase was chosen as the title of the book?

3. Discuss Lily’s husband Jim. How does his personality complement her strong nature?

4. Walls calls Half Broke Horses a “true life novel.” In her author’s note, she explains why. Do you agree with this label? What do you think of the “true life” genre?

5. “Helen’s beauty, as far as I was concerned, had been a curse, and I resolved that I would never tell Rosemary she was beautiful” (pg. 119). Examine Lily’s relationship with her daughter, Rosemary, and, in The Glass Castle, Rosemary’s relationship with Jeannette. How does each generation try to compensate for the one before? How does each mother try to avoid the mistakes or pain imposed upon her by her own mother?


Rain..I don't think anyone else has read The Glass Castle (ALTHOUGH YOU ALL SHOULD!!) Here are a few questions you and I can talk about if you want

Questions for readers who have also read The Glass Castle

1. In Half Broke Horses, Lily’s father decides to bring her home from school so that he can use her tuition money to breed dogs. This instance of selfishness bears a close resemblance to Rex Walls’s behavior in The Glass Castle when he takes the money Jeannette’s sister has been saving to escape Welch, WV, and goes on a drinking binge. Over and over these men disappoint their children, and yet they are forgiven. Talk about the lack of bitterness in both of these books. How do the children rationalize their parents’ behavior?

2. “There was a big difference between needing things and wanting things—though a lot of people had trouble telling the two apart—and at the ranch, I could see, we’d have pretty much everything we’d need but precious little else” (pg. 134–5). How might this description refer to Lily’s life as a whole? What effect did growing up without much have on Rosemary Walls, whom we learn more about in The Glass Castle?

4 comments:

  1. Ok good questions Nat! 1. I have mixed feelings because I absolutely don't believe in polygamy, but seeing that is a complete polygamist community the school would also be someone religious based. I would have problems if my kid was attending BYU and some teacher came in and started preaching polygamy...

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  2. First off, what did everyone think of the book before we get to number 1?

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  3. ok I really enjoyed the book, and I appreciate getting to know more of the family history after reading Glass, although, it still doesn't hold a candle to Glass...LOOOOOVED that one!

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  4. I am definitely glad I read it!

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