
Prairie Reunion
by Barbara Scot
Study Questions
Here are a few questions for your reading journal, and for our November 10th
(2nd Wednesday of the month) meeting, 7-8:30 p.m. in the Colorado Room (the
old Lake Austin Cafe)of the LCRA Complex at
3700 Lake Austin Blvd. To get there,
take the Enfield exit off MoPac. Turn left at the dead-end at Lake Austin Blvd.
Turn left at the LCRA sign. Park in visitor parking.
- What aspect of this book did you like most? What did you like least? Why?
- This book has the structure of a heroine's quest. In what sense is Scot a
heroine? What does she say she is searching for? When/how/why does her goal
change?
- Scot gives us a great many details of her mother's relationship to her
father (particularly in Chapter 8). But she also tells us about some of the
events of her own life. What are these events? How are they revealed? Can you
trace out Scot's own story from the bits of information she offers here and
there? Why didn't Scot make it easier for us to understand what happened to her?
- One strand of Scot's story has to do with her connection to the land. What
does the land mean to her? Why? How would this story have been different if her
parents (particularly her mother) had lived in the city? Could these events
have taken place in, say, Boston?
- Scot's researches take her deep into the history of previous generations of
her family and of her family's church. How are these two strands interwoven? How
does this material illuminate her mother's life choices?
- Authors can tell their stories chronologically, as Maya Angelou does, or
they can manipulate time through flashbacks and flashforwards, as Gretel Ehrlich
does. How does Scot tell her story? How does her method of telling affect your
reading and understanding?
- What role does the character of Vaneta play in this story? Why was it
necessary to include her?
- The book includes photographs, a family tree, and a map. What function do
these additions serve in the text? How do they affect your reading of the story?
- Do you have a mystery in your family? If so, how would you go about
attempting to unravel it? Is there a sense in which that mystery is embedded or
reflected in your own life?