BKMT READING GUIDES
Going Down South: A Novel
by Bonnie Glover
Paperback : 259 pages
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When fifteen-year-old Olivia Jean finds herself in the “family way,” her mother, Daisy, who has never been very maternal, springs into action. Daisy ...
Introduction
From the author of The Middle Sister comes a heartwarming tale of second chances and the unparalleled love between mothers and daughters.
When fifteen-year-old Olivia Jean finds herself in the “family way,” her mother, Daisy, who has never been very maternal, springs into action. Daisy decides that Olivia Jean can’t stay in New York and whisks her away to her grandmother’s farm in Alabama to have the baby–even though Daisy and her mother, Birdie, have been estranged for years. When they arrive, Birdie lays down the law: Sure, her granddaughter can stay, but Daisy will have to stay as well. Though Daisy is furious, she has no choice.
Now, under one little roof in the 1960s Deep South, three generations of spirited, proud women are forced to live together. One by one, they begin to lose their inhibitions and share their secrets. And as long-guarded truths emerge, a baby is born–a child with the power to turn these virtual strangers into a real, honest-to-goodness family.
Praise for Going Down South:
“Long live Olivia Jean, Daisy, and Birdie! These three daughters, mothers, and women are smart, feisty, and funny. Their stories will break your heart in the very best way. I absolutely loved Going Down South!”
—Carleen Brice, author of Orange Mint and Honey
Excerpt
GOING DOWN SOUTH Part I Olivia Jean Her father, Turk, went down first, holding his work boots by the strings with his overnight kit tucked under one arm. He walked on his toes, taking the seventh step down with a side maneuver because he knew it creaked. He had learned his lesson the hard way from her mother, Daisy, waiting at the top of the stairs one night about five years ago. His foot strayed and pressed ahead when he should have gone to the left or the right. He might have made it past her if it hadn't been for that step. She had dozed off and there are ways to get around Daisy when she's asleep. But he was in no state to remember all of the things he should have remembered. And besides, Daisy was sitting with her legs flung across the top of the landing just so she could catch him. Clutched in her right hand was a broom, leaning forward at a cockeyed slant, straw bottom down and ready to do damage. That night in March, Olivia Jean had just passed her tenth birthday and should have been asleep, when he touched lucky stair number seven and it whined loud enough to wake her mother. Daisy grunted, choking in a snore and was on her feet lightning quick without even rubbing her eyes or wiping the thin line of drool at the corner of her mouth. She gripped the broom in both hands, turned it upside down and swung at Turk's copper-skinned head. He leaned away in time but she started at him again. Her robe fell open and Olivia Jean saw long, thick legs under a nightgown that stopped near her coochie, and then one of her titties fell out as she lifted her arm and aimed again. Olivia Jean was crouched at the keyhole of her bedroom door, jaws wide, the scene surprising her so much that she banged her head against the doorknob as she tried to get a better view. Daisy kept swinging as if she was trying to get at a spider in the corner or a big, fat cockroach that always appeared out of nowhere when company came to visit. There was rage in her swinging, rage reserved for bugs, bad impressions and drunken husbands. Then her other titty bounced free. And Turk fell back, clutching the railing. Seemed as though he was as surprised as Olivia Jean was. In all her days Olivia Jean had never seen Daisy's girl parts, and seeing them then, when her mother was in the middle of trying to kill her daddy, was enough to freeze Olivia Jean right where she was -- on her knees, peeking into the dimmed hallway when she should have been curled asleep with her Raggedy Ann tucked under her arm. That's when Olivia Jean took a deep breath, stood up, opened the door and ran out of her bedroom. Turk wasn't grabbing the broom or telling Daisy to stop or trying to move away or anything. He had leaned back, dropped his arms, and let Daisy continue to hit him with the broom across his shoulders, moving him backwards as if she was going to push him down the stairs. Olivia Jean knew someone was going to call the police if they didn't stop. At four in the morning people should be in bed, going to bed or at least thinking about going to bed, not on a rampage like Daisy was, beating Turk with the straw end of a broom while she danced around the hallway half naked. view abbreviated excerpt only...Discussion Questions
1. What was your inspiration to write this book?2. GOING DOWN SOUTH deals with some weighty themes, including sexism, gender preferences, skin color, abortion, rape. What would you say is the overall theme in GDS and why?
3. Who is your favorite character in GDS and why?
4. What do you hope your readers will come away with after they read GDS?
5. Tell us about why skin color played a rather prominent role in GDS but not so much in The Middle Sister?
6. The love scenes between Birdie and Lupe were more funny than torrid. Why?
7. Did you have trouble envisioning a household with three women since you don't have any sisters or daughters?
8. Food seems to play an important role in both TMS and GDS. Why is this the case?
9. What was the hardest part about writing this book? Who was the hardest character to capture and put down on paper? Why?
10. Your two books are substantially different in setting and even characters but they both seem to celebrate families with strong matriarchs at the head of households that males have essentially deserted. Why is this the case and will this ring true in your next book also?
Notes From the Author to the Bookclub
GOING DOWN SOUTH was an important book for me to write. The characters, Olivia Jean, Daisy and Birdie represent women at different phases of their lives. Young Olivia Jean is bright and optimistic. She makes the wrong choice but she is willing to stand up and accept the consequences. Daisy, Olivia Jean's mother, is hardened and angry. She's made some of the same mistakes that Olivia Jean has made but is unhappy about the outcome. She spends her life waiting for her husband to “act right.” Birdie, Daisy's mother, is a woman who has lived, broken all the rules and almost made peace with everything she has done except her failure as a mother to Daisy. GOING DOWN SOUTH speaks to making things right between mothers and daughters. This novel tackles what happens when we have failed in very substantial ways to parent early and well. I wanted to create memorable characters; who would make readers laugh, cry and understand that when we have made mistakes, we've got to own them. Sometimes that's enough and sometimes it's not. But at least it's a good start.Book Club Recommendations
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