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The Moon in the Mango Tree
by Pamela Ewen

Published: 2008-05-01
Paperback : 480 pages
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The Moon in the Mango Tree is set in the Roaring Twenties when young women were lobbying to get the right to vote and forge new ground. Barbara is faced with a decision to follow her own dream of becoming an opera singer and her responsibility to follow her husband to Siam, present day Thailand. ...
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Introduction

The Moon in the Mango Tree is set in the Roaring Twenties when young women were lobbying to get the right to vote and forge new ground. Barbara is faced with a decision to follow her own dream of becoming an opera singer and her responsibility to follow her husband to Siam, present day Thailand. When she chooses her husband, Barbara finds herself on a journey to the jungles of Siam to take on the role of missionary doctor's wife. There she encounters the local people and Buddhist culture and the missionary workers trying to bring Jesus to this remote location. The Moon in the Mango Tree is an historical romance of love, patience and endurance. This is the third novel for Pamela Binnings Ewen. She resides with her husband near New Orleans, Louisiana.

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Excerpt

The next day I woke earlier than usual. The light filtering through the bedroom window was dim, the air heavy and damp. I gazed around with a vague, ominous feeling. After a moment I turned over and tried to go back to sleep, but thoughts of Harvey and jungle fever spun in my mind. Finally I gave up, rose and dressed, and headed down the stairs for breakfast. ... view entire excerpt...

Discussion Questions

1. Barbara Perkins has trained for years to sing grand opera. A former suffragette, she's beautiful, talented, and smart. Twice during The Moon In The Mango Tree-at the beginning and the end-Barbara is forced to choose between pursuing a singing career and her love for Harvey. What factors do you think most influence her decision in each case?

2. Barbara travels to Siam with Harvey in 1919 and arrives at the mission near the ancient walled city of Nan, wary but optimistic. Immediately she clashes with Amalie and Emory Breeden. Reverend Breeden tells her that it is “fear, not joy, that leads us.” How does this perspective influence Barbara? How does Joshua Smithers argue against this view of Christianity with the Potter's Tale in chapter 19?

3. Barbara visits the deserted Buddhist temple Wat Phumin despite warnings from the missionaries. There she meets an elderly monk who describes life as a rainbow. What does he mean by that? How does this contrast with Barbara's view of life? with the Siam mission's view of life? What does Harvey's reaction when he learns of her visit to the temple reveal about his relationship with Barbara?

4. What does Barbara mean when she says that her father was her “listener”? Do you have a listener in your life?

5. During the monsoon, Harvey leaves Barbara to tend a village ravaged by jungle fever. Barbara's feelings of abandonment lead to resentment and simmering anger. If she had learned what happened in the village at this point in the story, how do you think that might have changed the course of Barbara's life?

6. What does Joshua Smithers mean when he warns Barbara that she must define what she means by the word “religious” before she rejects it.

7. Toward the end of Part I, seeking comfort, Barbara compares Christian and Buddhist thought and comes to a startling conclusion. What conclusion does she reach? How does this change her own view of the mission at Nan and her own view of life?

8. Stars are mentioned several times throughout the book. What is the significance of this statement by Barbara in chapter 21: “False stars? That too?”

9. When, in 1926, Harvey and Barbara are asked to return to Siam, to Bangkok, she agrees to go, but resolves that things will be different this time. What does she mean by her statement that she was riding a glimmering chariot and forgot altogether the sun god's warning: “Keep to the middle course”?

10. On her way to Rome in Chapter 29, Barbara concludes that for Harvey, duty and his work will always come first. Do you believe Harvey feels this way? Why did Barbara feel like a hatchling that's just spotted the first crack in the shell?

11. In Rome, her new friend, Ted Jordan, tells her of stallion races that the Romans held thousands of years ago in Piazza Navonne. The winner's head was lopped off at the finish line, he says, just at the moment of triumph. Barbara comments that the race was won, and we only remember the winners. The others are dust, gone and forgotten. What does she mean by that and how does it apply to her own life at that moment?

12. In Lausanne, Barbara finds herself crying as she watches her daughters sleep at night. What is the conflict that she's facing? What does she mean when she muses that, “It is not a matter of love. . . . True love requires strength, not weakness as a partner.”

13. During one of her singing lessons in Rome, the Maestro says to Barbara: “Free the music. It is inside of you. Let it flow from within. You are the instrument.” When faced with the choice between Harvey and the new life that Rome offers, Barbara thinks of these words. What do they mean to her as she makes this final choice?

14. Many women today still struggle with the excruciating choice that Barbara was forced to make between family and a career. Do you believe that women today are able to give 100 percent to both? Do women have to choose between the two, or do you think there's a way to compromise? What do you think of Barbara's belief that when you choose between two things you love, one of them is lost? Have you ever had to make that choice?

15. The priest in Rome tells Barbara that Harvey's work in Siam was no abstract ideal. What did he mean by that? He reminded Barbara of the words of the Apostle, Paul…of faith, hope, and love, the greatest of these is love. What do you think Paul means by these words-wouldn't it seem that faith would hold the higher value to the apostle?

Notes From the Author to the Bookclub

Dear Readers:

The most recent US census indicates that more and more working mothers are opting out of the workforce to stay home, or return home. The Oprah Winfrey Show recently focused on this hot issue when Elizabeth Vargas resigned her position as co-anchor on ABC World News Tonight, saying that she realized that she could no longer hop on a plane to go across the globe to cover a story at the drop of a hat, leaving her husband and baby behind. And Harvard Business School reports that only 38% of female graduates in child raising years are now in the work place full time. What's going on? Paula Zahn asked the question on CNN - is this a trend?

The Moon In The Mango Tree deals with this difficult question--the choice that many women must make between home and the workplace. Having practiced law for 25 years, I know how difficult it is to balance family and a career, not to mention actually facing the choice and choosing one or the other. There's no question that today the opportunity is there for women to have it all--but Leslie Stahl said this on Sixty Minutes not long ago: "Could it really be that this generation of women, the first to achieve success without having to fight for it, is now walking away, willingly, and without regrets? Opting Out?"

So what do you think, ladies - home or workplace, or can we have both? Gentlemen, do you want to weigh in? Can we have it all, knowing that many of us have to compete with those who have no family limitations, working long hours, weekends, holidays? And if so, are we saying that we can give 100% to each? And do you want to do that? Let me know - I'd like to hear what you're thinking. You can contact me through my web site www.themooninthemangotree.com

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