Authors: Tawni O'Dell
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GALLERY READERS GROUP GUIDE
Angels Burning
Tawni O'Dell
Introduction
Angels Burning
tells the story of a small town that has suffered the tragic and gruesome murder of a teenage girl. Local police chief Dove Carnahan has been tasked with finding the girl's murderer but must navigate through a slew of defensive and hostile relatives and friends in order to determine the truth. In the process of this investigation, dark secrets of a similar murder in the town years earlier are unearthed and the trauma from her personal life competes for Dove's attention. Throughout the investigation, Dove learns that under everyone's tough exterior and behind all of the rumors that the locals spread, no one is who they appear to beâincluding those closest to her and even herself.
Topics and Questions for Discussion
1. Discuss the title of the book
Angels Burning
. How does the title relate to Campbell's Run's hardships with the collapsed mine and its
“ability to swallow up lives?”
What is the physical and economic impact on the town's inhabitants?
2. Dove calls Campbell's Run a
“poisoned ghost town.”
However she and many others have chosen to remain near it. Discuss Dove's motivations for remaining in the town that has caused her so much pain. Discuss how your perception of her character and motivations changed after learning about her past. Was she really
“on the side of the angels . . . when it was all over?”
3. Discuss Dove's motivations for becoming a police officer. In what ways did she grow up to protect others from the horrific things that happened to her, Champ, and Neely as children? In what ways is she trying to cope with the murder of her mother and the cover-up?
4. Lucky, the man convicted of murdering Dove's mother, has been released from prison after thirty-five years. How has his release affected Dove? How does she react to him finding her? What is her perception of him and the past that they share?
5. How does Lucky's return affect Dove's investigation of Camio's murder? Dove observes that
“One of the worst aspects of growing older is the lengthening of hindsight. As it stretches, it becomes thinner and more transparent and we see things more clearly.”
How does Dove feel about her actions in her mother's death at the end of the novel?
6. Discuss how your interpretation of Dove's investigative tactics changes after learning about her violent past. Has her personal history informed how she approached this murder investigation? Why or why not?
7. Dove observes that she gets
“these flashes of irrational passion where [she's] willing to risk everything [she's] worked for in order to accomplish one thing [she] can't control.”
Where do you see instances of this in the novel? Where does she lose her objectivity when reflecting upon Camio's murder and on her personal life?
8. Discuss how your impressions of some of the following characters changed and evolved throughout the novel: Dove, Champ, Shawna, Camio, Jessy, Zane, Lucky, and Miranda. Was your initial impression of these characters based on physical presentations and rumors? Did learning more about their backgrounds and experiences increase your empathy towards them? Why or why not?
9. Discuss the relationship between Dove, Neely, and Champ. How are they complicit in each other's lies? How do they distance themselves to avoid thinking about their past and their mother?
10. As the first female chief of police in Franklin County, Pennsylvania, Dove faces sexism at various points in her career and throughout the
novel. How does she deal with being treated differently among her coworkers and with the men and women she interrogates? What assumptions do others make based on her age? As Dove notes:
“I'm okay with my age, but nobody else is. Especially men.”
11. Dove observes,
“We didn't know living nightmares don't ever go away because you can't wake up from them. The most you can hope for is to dilute them by spreading them around.”
How does this quote reflect the lives of various characters in the novel?
12. Consider the parenting styles portrayed in
Angels Burning
. During the course of the novel, parents are portrayed abandoning their children, being disinterested in their well-being, putting them in harm's way, or defending and protecting them. Reflect on how these characters were treated as children and think about how that may have informed their parenting style. Dove observes:
“I also know what it's like to have a mother who doesn't care about you. This isn't always the same thing as having one who doesn't love you. Love is a highly subjective concept; everyone has different standards for what qualifies.”
How this is reflected in the various relationships portrayed in the novel.
Enhance Your Book Club
1. Read Tawni O'Dell's previous novel,
One of Us,
with your book club. Discuss how these two novels relate to each other. Both are set in mining towns. Discuss the significance of setting and locale in O'Dell's work.
2. Tawni O'Dell wrote an essay called “The Oprah Effect” for
OfftheShelf.com
detailing the experience of her book
Back Roads
being chosen as an Oprah Book-of-the-Month Club Main Selection. Read the essay here and discuss her experience:
http://offtheshelf.com/2014/09/the-oprah-effect-tawni-odell-back-roads/
3. Visit
www.tawniodell.com
to learn more about the author, her other books, and read other essays she has written.
AUTHOR PHOTOGRAPH BY CAROL ROSEGG
TAWNI O'DELL
is the
New York Times
bestselling author of five previous novels, including
Back Roads
, which was an Oprah's Book Club pick and a Book-of-the-Month Club Main Selection. Her works have been published in more than forty countries. Visit her website at
tawniodell.com
.
FOR MORE ON THIS AUTHOR:
authors.simonandschuster.com/Tawni-ODell
MEET THE AUTHORS, WATCH VIDEOS AND MORE AT
ALSO BY TAWNI O'DELL
One of Us
Back Roads
Coal Run
Sister Mine
Fragile Beasts
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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.