Questions for Discussion
1. “Sad words are just another beauty. A sad story
means, this storyteller is alive” (p. 9). For Little Bee and other
asylum seekers, the story of their life thus far is often all they
have. What happens to the characters that carry their stories with
them, both physically and mentally? What happens when we try to forget
our past? How much control over their own stories do the characters in
the book seem to have?
2. Little Bee tells the reader, “We must see all scars
as beauty. Okay? This will be our secret. Because take it from me, a
scar does not form on the dying. A scar means, I survived” (p. 9).
Which characters in the story are left with physical scars? Emotional
scars? Do they embrace them as beautiful? Do you have any scars you’ve
come to embrace? Did you feel more connected to Little Bee as a
narrator after this pact?
3. Little Bee strives to learn the Queen’s English in
order to survive in the detention center. How does her grasp of the
language compare with Charlie’s? How does the way each of these two
characters handle the English language help to characterize them?
4. How did it affect your reading experience to have
two narrators? Did you trust one woman more than the other? Did you
prefer the voice of one above the other?
5. Little Bee credits a small bottle of nail polish for
“saving her life” while she was in the detention center (p. 7). Is
there any object or act that helps you feel alive and beautiful, even
when everything else seems to be falling apart?
6. Of the English language Little Bee says, “Every word
can defend itself. Just when you go to grab it, it can split into two
separate meanings so the understanding closes on empty air” (p. 12).
What do you think she means by this? Can you think of any examples of
English words that defend themselves? Why is language so important to
Little Bee?
7. Little Bee says of horror films, “Horror in your
country is something you take a dose of to remind yourself that you are
not suffering from it” (p. 45). Do you agree? Was reading this novel
in any way a dose of horror for you? How did it help you reflect on the
presence or lack of horror in your own life?
8. Little Bee figures out the best way to kill herself
in any given situation, just in case “the men come suddenly.” How do
these plans help Little Bee reclaim some power? Were you disturbed by
this, or were you able to find the humor in some of the scenarios she
imagines?
9. What does Udo changing her name to Little Bee
symbolize for you? How does her new name offer her protection? Do you
think the name suits her?
10. “To have an affair, I began to realize, was a
relatively minor transgression. But to really escape from Andrew, to
really become myself, I had to go the whole way and fall in love” (p.
161-162). Do you agree with Sarah that an affair is a minor
transgression? How did falling in love with someone else help Sarah
become herself? What role did Andrew play in perpetuating Sarah’s
extramarital affair?
11. When Little Bee finds that Andrew has hanged
himself she thinks, “Of course I must save him, whatever it costs me,
because he is a human being.” And then she thinks, “Of course I must
save myself, because I am a human being too” (p. 194). How do the
characters in the story decide when to put themselves first and when to
offer charity? Is one human life ever more valuable than another? What
if one of the lives in question is your own?
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