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Table of Contents
About The Book
Pony Carteret has always been a strong swimmer. So when she is discovered drowned at the family’s summer home on Vermont’s Lake Aral—her red hair tangled in an anchor chain and her baby abandoned on shore—her family is stunned by disbelief.
As the police investigate, the Carterets are forced to confront troubling questions. Why was Pony at the house that night? Was she hiding secrets? And why had she never revealed the identity of her child’s father? Though the case is ultimately ruled an accident, Pony’s older brother, William, cannot let it go.
His search for answers uncovers evidence that a stranger was at the house the night Pony died—and soon leads him far beyond his sister’s mysterious death. As William digs deeper, long-buried family secrets begin to surface, exposing hidden truths about his deceased mother, his family, and himself. What he uncovers threatens to unravel everything the Carterets have spent generations trying to protect.
Atmospheric and gripping, Perfect Family is a haunting novel about the devastating power of secrets and the lengths families will go to keep them buried.
Reading Group Guide
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Pam Lewis
Questions and Topics For Discussion
1. The quote by John Steinbeck from the Grapes of Wrath at the beginning of the book reads, “How can we live without our lives? How will we know it’s us without our past?” Much of Perfect Family centers on identity and a deeper understanding of one’s self. Which character’s identity, or perception of identity, shifts the most throughout the course of the book?
2. Although William is one of the more dominant characters in the book the point of view of the story changes from chapter to chapter. Why do you think that the author chose to do this? What does this voice allow her to do as a storyteller? Which voice do you find most compelling? Most trustworthy and believable?
3. Shock, Denial, Bargaining, Guilt, Anger, Depression, Acceptance and Hope make up what many physiatrists call the stages of grief. Discuss if and how William and the other family members go through any or all of these stages? Which lasts the longest? How do the circumstances of loss affect how the family expresses their emotions?
4. The author writes, “Jasper ran the show. He always had and he always would.” (p. 62) Is this true? Who do you think really has the most control in the family? Who has the least? How do the different family members exert control over each other?
5. Keith enters the story when he meets Mira for coffee. She describes, “He had that pull she liked in a guy. Something she never wanted to analyze.” (p. 82). What were your first impressions of Keith? Was he trustworthy? Who the family did you side with when he was introduced? Why does Mira take to him so quickly?
6. Discuss how the author uses pacing throughout the story. When does she speed up her narrative and when does she slow down? What effect does this have on the plot and character development?
7. Each of the siblings of the Carteret family is very different. Who did you identity with the most? Who would you most like to spend time with?
8. William says of Keith, “He’s not family.” (p. 166) Ruth later continues the discussion on family by saying, “You have to participate. You have to be present.” What does it mean to be part of a family? How do you define who is in a family? How strong is the Carteret family? Is it possible to join a family?
9. Minerva says to William, “Your parents believed they could triumph over the past – I’m speaking of your mother and Jasper.” (p. 195) Can someone triumph over their past? What does that mean?
10. William’s mother writes in her note, “Necessity is the mother of invention – Larry’s philosophy about everything. The best way to learn anything is when you have no choice.” (p. 216) Do you agree with Larry’s thinking? What are other ways to learn?
11. Keith and William are true brothers. How are they similar? How are they different? Do they want the same thing?
12. Towards the end of the book William speaks of Andrew. “The shame isn’t his. It was Pony’s, Keith’s. It was Mother’s. He shouldn’t have to suffer for it the way I did. The way we all have.” Whose shame is it? Should the family be ashamed at all?
Enhance Your Reading Group
1. There are many websites where you can learn more about your own family history including: www.genealogy.com/, www.genealogy.org/, www.familysearch.org/, www.ancestry.com/, www.archives.gov/genealogy/
2. To visit or learn more about vacations in Vermont visit: http://www.vermontvacation.com/
3. Memory retrieval and the passing along of family history is central to the book. What is your earliest memory? Is it accurate? How did your family pass down family history?
Product Details
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster (April 21, 2009)
- Length: 352 pages
- ISBN13: 9781416564898
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Raves and Reviews
" Pam Lewis's Perfect Family is a masterful, atmospheric tale about the ways in which family secrets, no matter how long they're buried, can wield their tremendous power." -- NewReads.com
"Lewis skillfully lures the reader through her narrative maze with plenty of plot twists." -- Publishers Weekly
"Pam Lewis is the literary equivalent of a forensic scientist. In her compelling second novel, Perfect Family, Lewis pulls the body of a beautiful young woman from a lake, then, layer by suspenseful layer, unpeels and reveals a well-to-do family's secrets, lies, and hidden heartaches. I was riveted." -- Wally Lamb, New York Times bestselling author of She's Come Undone, I Know This Much Is True, and The Hour I First Believed
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