Wednesday, February 18, 2015

The Cemetery of Forgotten Books

There is also a somewhat charming corner of Facebook dedicated to The Cemetery of Forgotten Books series. Check it out here:  https://www.facebook.com/TheCemeteryOfForgottenBooksSeries


Prisoner of Heaven info & discussion questions

Go here for everything you want to know about The Prisoner of Heaven

Or if you just want the discussion questions:











Discussion Questions
1. Describe the relationship between Daniel and Fermin. What ties these men together? What do we learn about these two friends and their lives as the story unfolds?

2. At the beginning of the novel, a mysterious stranger enters Sempere & Sons and purchases the store's rare copy of The Count of Monte Cristo. How does this classic French tale tie into The Prisoner of Heaven? If you have read both books, how are they similar? Who is The Prisoner of Heaven and how did he earn this name? Is his incarceration a form of pure damnation or is there a sublime grace to it as well?

3. The stranger inscribes the book with an enigmatic message: "For Fermin Romero de Torres, who came back from among the dead and holds the key to the future." What key is this message referring to? How does this inscription drive the story and where does it lead the characters?

4. Daniel makes note of Fermin's stockpile of aphorisms, such as "A good repast is like a lass in bloom: not to appreciate it is the business of fools." Look for them throughout the novel, choose a few you especially like, and then share them with your reading group. How does Fermin come by his wisdom?

5. Why does Fermin tell Daniel that he has been protecting him, "From the truth Daniel . . . from the truth?" Why does Daniel—or anyone—need protection from truth? Does truth have the power to free Daniel or to imprison him in a psychological way?

6. Ruiz Zafón interweaves past and present to tell the story of The Prisoner of Heaven. How does life in 1939 Barcelona compare to that of 1957? Describe the Barcelona that Ruiz Zafón creates. What kind of a place is it? How is the civil war still shaping the lives of its inhabitants two decades after it began?

7. Fermin reveals to Daniel that he has been imprisoned in Montjuïc Castle. What kind of conditions do he and the other prisoners there endure? Among the prisoners he meets is the writer David Martín. Why is Martín in prison? Why are writers and intellectuals among the first casualties of a dictatorship? Other inmates say that Martín is mad. Is he crazy or does he use madness to survive?

8. What is David Martín's relationship with Mauricio Valls, the prison's governor? Compare and contrast the two men. What qualities would you ascribe to each? What happens to each of them and how are they both connected to Daniel?

9. Why does Fermin eventually go along with Martín's crazy escape scheme? What might have happened if he had not?

10. Fermin is rescued and nursed back to health by the invisible poor of Barcelona's shadow world. "There are times and places where not to be anyone is more honourable than someone," Ruiz Zafón writes. What is the meaning of his words and how does it relate to the "time and place" brought to life in the novel? Is it better to fight or to give in to what Daniel calls "the convenient cowardice of survivors"? What is sacrificed with each choice?

11. Daniel's friend, Professor Alburquerque, tells him, "Cities have no memory and they need someone like me, a sage with his feet on the ground, to keep it alive." Explain what he means. Why do cities have no memory? Why is it is easy to forget even the most devastating of events? What happens when we do forget? Would you consider Ruiz Zafón to be a memory keeper like the professor?

12. When Daniel discovers a letter from his wife's old suitor in her coat pocket, should he have read it? How is Bea's former fiancé tied into the mystery of both Daniel and Fermin's past?

13. Late in the novel, Daniel and Fermin visit the Cemetery of Forgotten Books. What does Daniel find there and how does he react to his discovery? What is this repository and why is it secret? Why did the prison governor, Valls, want to learn its whereabouts? How do places such as the Cemetery of Forgotten Books exist in a brutal and dangerous world like fascist Spain?

14. What do you think comes next for Daniel and Fermin?

15. In the novel's prologue, the author writes, "The Prisoner of Heaven is part of a cycle of novels set in the literary universe of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books of which The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game are the two first installments. Although each work within the cycle presents an independent, self-contained tale, they are all connected through characters and storylines, creating thematic and narrative links." If you have read the other two books, identify these links. How does reading this third installment shed new light on the characters and your understanding of the mysterious Cemetery of Forgotten Books?
(Questions issued by publisher.)

The Prisoner of Heaven (The Cemetery of Forgotten Books #3)

Our March book is The Prisoner of Heaven, by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. It is the third book in The Cemetery of Forgotten Books series.

1. The Shadow of the Wind
2. Angel's Game
3. The Prisoner of Heaven
4. Rose of Fire


Thursday, February 5, 2015

If you want to read more . . .

If you're interesting in learning more about the time period of Three Souls and the rise of communism in China, I recommend the acclaimed memoir, Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China.

"A Chinese woman chronicles the struggle of her grandmother, her mother, and herself to survive in a China torn apart by wars, invasions, revolution, and continuing upheaval, from 1907 to the present."


Three Souls Nominated for a Major Award


Janie Chang's Three Souls is in the running for the IMPAC Dublin award. You may not be familiar with this prize, but it is a BIG DEAL. This is the world’s most valuable annual literary prize for a single work of fiction published in English, and is worth €100,000.


Read more here:  http://www.impacdublinaward.ie/news/9-canadian-novels-in-the-running-for-the-2015-award/

Previous Canadian winners are Rawi Hage for De Niro's Game and Alistair MacLeod for No Great Mischief.


Three Souls, by Janie Chang ~ Author's Website

Lots of good info here:  http://www.janiechang.com/home