BKMT READING GUIDES
Things Left Unspoken: A Novel
by Eva Marie Everson
Paperback : 384 pages
2 clubs reading this now
2 members have read this book
Introduction
Jo Lynn Hunter is at a crossroads in life when her greataunt Stella insists that she return home to restore the old family house in sleepy Cottonwood, Georgia. Seeing the project as the perfect excuse for some therapeutic time away from her selfabsorbed husband and his snobby Atlanta friends, Jo Lynn longs to get her teeth into a noteworthy and satisfying project. But things are not what they seem, both in the house and within the complex history of her family. Was her greatgrandfather the pillar of the community she thought he was? What is Aunt Stella hiding? And will Jo Lynn's marriage survive the renovation? Jo Lynn isn't sure she wants to know the truthbut sometimes the truth has a way of making itself known.The past comes alive in this wellwritten and thoughtful novel full of secrets, drama, and family with a hint of Southern drawl.
Excerpt
In the early days, beyond the rose-covered trellises on the back porch, perfect rows of vegetables for canning and freezing were planted, both for our family and for neighbors in need when there was abundance. Standing behind the small garden was the farm. It extended alongside the highway that ran beside the left side of the house. The crops stretched toward the horizon and out of sight, interrupted only by the leaning of an old barn, the rise of a tin silo, or the deliberate movement of a John Deere tractor. ... view entire excerpt...Discussion Questions
In your way of thinking, what is the difference between renovation and preservation?What is Jo-Lynn’s memory of Uncle Jim connected her to his spiritual life?
Have you ever felt like Jo-Lynn: totally in the world and yet completely out of sorts with it. How’d you get through it?
Describe Jo-Lynn’s relationships between her and various members of her family.
What “characters” in Things Left Unspoken’s cast of characters did you feel as though you connected to?
Do Jo-Lynn and Evan really love each other or is theirs a marriage of convenience and comfort? Where do you think their marriage went wrong?
Why do you think God never allowed Stella and Valentine to come back together?
Do you think you could love a child in the way Stella chose to love Bettina? What characteristic of God do you see in the way Stella chose to handle her situation?
Why was the discovery of Cottonwood’s secrets so important/devasting to
Jo-Lynn?
Jo-Lynn felt the issue of “legacy” to be very important. What kind of legacy do you hope to leave?
What prejudices have you had to overcome in your life? What sacrifices have you had to make? What secrets have you had to keep?
At the end of Things Left Unspoken Jo-Lynn and Evan have reached a compromise of sorts. Describe it from both points of view. Is Evan really the mayor of Cottonwood?
Suggested by Members
Notes From the Author to the Bookclub
One gray February afternoon, I was sitting on the back patio of my home, rocking in the front porch rocker that had come off of my great-grandparents home; thinking about the day my uncle Jimmy was buried. It snowed that day. Not a blinding kind of snow. This was, I thought, angels dancing on air. A “first line” came to mind. I jumped up, ran to my office, and started typing. I thought about the woman who bought my ancestral home, a woman named Caren-with-a C, and how she’d promised to restore the house only to let it sit and rot. A story was born of a woman who never had children, who thought because of that choice she’d not have a legacy to leave, a woman whose great-Uncle Jim had died and that when he was buried, “angels danced on air.” Aunt Stella (in the book) was created in the image of my great-Aunt Della. Several years ago I stayed in a rustic inn where giant black and white portraits of locals from bygone eras were displayed. One was of a man, dressed in overalls, long white hair and beard prominent under a soiled farmer’s hat. The man’s name was Valentine. This portrait has stayed with me ever since. Valentine Bach was born from that picture. All of this went into the creating of a story (completely of my own making) of two generations of townspeople, one greatly affected by the other’s life decisions. I hope that as readers read (and enjoy!) the Things Left Unspoken, they will see how every life le aves a legacy just by being and that within every family are things never spoken of but impact others just the same.Book Club Recommendations
Recommended to book clubs by 1 of 2 members.
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