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Book Discussion Groups
Suggested Discussion Starters

Libraries throughout the state are in the developing stages of book discussion groups.  Please visit us again soon for updates.

Book Discussion Groups

Suggested Discussion Starters (pdf version)

Prepared by Thomas E. Douglass

1.) Money and Religion have always been points of contention and focus in Appalachian life. How does The Night of the Hunter portray those contentions?

2.) The Preacher Harry Powell is based on the notorious Harry Powers, the Bluebeard of Quiet Dell (near Clarksburg), a lonely hearts killer who preyed upon widows and their children for insurance money. The defiant Rachel Cooper who finds and protects John and Pearl is based on the real-life Rachel Kutscher, a woman who cared for orphaned children near Quiet Dell and whom Grubb first met when he was 14 years old. Are there other real parallels between the book and West Virginia life – characters, places, situations, social customs, etc.?

3.) Grubb was known as a symbolic writer, the river as symbol of escape and freedom, for example. Are there other symbolic elements in the story? How do these symbols interact with one another and tell a story of their own?

4.) Why do you think writers like Stephen King admire The Night of the Hunter?

5.) Like many Grubb stories, The Night of the Hunter takes place during the Great Depression, when jobs and money and food were scarce: how does this setting help dramatize the plight of Ben Harper and his family, Willa, John, and Pearl?

6.) The actor Charles Laughton, who directed the film version of the story, called the novel a “Mother Goose tale.” The novel does have a child’s fairytale quality to it. The Appalachian Jack Tales often tell stories about defenseless, wayward children who have to use their wits and luck to outsmart their evil step-parents or to defeat some other evil adult character. And the Appalachian “Pretty Polly” songs often tell stories of unprotected women manipulated and victimized by men. How is The Night of the Hunter a fairytale for children and for adults? Specifically, how does the novel present a moral and empower children and women?

7.) In his third published novel The Watchman (1961) Grubb writes, “For what is Hate but Love that has lost its way in the dark.” It is a saying and a theme he liked to repeat in his work. Confused ideas about sex and love often serve as a source of evil in his work and especially in The Night of the Hunter. How does the mix of sex and love help drive the story?

8.) Could this story only be set in West Virginia? Yes? No? Why or why not?





 

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Last modified: 09/16/08