The Taste of Salt (23 page)

Read The Taste of Salt Online

Authors: Martha Southgate

BOOK: The Taste of Salt
10.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

And here's another note from that same page or two
of rumination, the birth of the other major theme of the book: “One big change today—have her go home and find out her brother's an addict. Parents flipping out. That's what she has to deal with when she gets home. Getting him into rehab or something. No sick dad. Let dad live and be present. Two parents. Crazy. And maybe we can build the marital conflict by rolling back through it. Let her relationship with her parents reflect her discomfort with her heritage, her hometown.” Then I have a note to myself to begin researching “fish, addiction, water-related jobs.” That's how it started, that one thought one day.

I've long been interested in the mechanisms and effects of addiction, but when I began work on this book, I had no idea it would become such a central theme. But that's what's great about writing fiction, the mystery of it, even as you do it. Eudora Welty once said, “If you haven't surprised yourself, you haven't written.” Those words are part of why I write fiction, to attempt to surprise readers—and myself—with some aspect of story, some aspect of life, that they didn't expect to find. I hope that readers of
The Taste of Salt
will find themselves surprised and moved. I hope that they will find themselves thinking of how one lives in a family in a slightly different way.

Questions for Discussion

1. Josie, the protagonist of
The Taste of Salt
, is deeply tied to two places: Cleveland, Ohio, her birthplace, and Woods Hole, where she makes her life and work. She has very different relationships to each place. Discuss the ways in which the two places differ from one another. To what extent do they function as characters in the novel?

2. Josie's father, Ray, and her brother, Tick, both struggle with alcoholism and other addictions. Does Josie harbor any addictions of her own?

3. While there is alcoholism in the African-American community, as in any other community in the United States, relatively few memoirs or novels have been published about it. Why do you think that might be the case?

4. The author uses an interweaving narrative in which each of the six major characters speaks periodically and Josie serves as a kind of overarching consciousness going in and out of various characters' lives. Other novels that have taken this approach to a greater or lesser degree in recent years are Jeffrey Eugenides'
Middlesex
and Junot Díaz's
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.
Why do you think Southgate uses this narrative approach?

5. Josie struggles with both the family she came from and with conflicting feelings about being one of the only black scientists in her milieu. Why might successful people try to leave their past (and their families) behind? Do you think it's ever possible to do that?

6. On
page 130
, Josie says that she doesn't want to “fit the stereotype of black girl with a no ‘count brother.” Do you think there is such a stereotype? What do you think of Josie's comment or of the way it bonds her to her friend Maren?

7. The characters in the Henderson family have wildly varying reactions to the culture and tenets of Alcoholics Anonymous. What do you think of their range of responses? Are you familiar with the organization? If you are, what are your feelings about it?

8.
The Taste of Salt
is very much a story of family shame and acceptance. Does Tick ever arrive at that state of acceptance? Does Josie? Ray? Sarah?

9. What impact do you think race has on the alcoholism of the addicted characters in the novel?

10. If Josie had been able to make a life with Ben, do you think it would have been successful or would it have failed? Why? What do you think of her adulterous behavior?

11. How does the author portray her alcoholic characters—sympathetically or unsympathetically? How do those portrayals affect how we feel about everyone in the family?

12. When the author is from the same town as the protagonist, the tendency is to assume autobiography. What is gained and what is lost when the reader makes this assumption? How does it alter, enrich, or diminish your experience of the work?

13. At the novel's end, there is a strong sense of hope for a kind of reconciliation between father and daughter. What do you think would have to happen to make this a lasting reconciliation? Are you convinced by Ray's change in behavior and lifestyle? Do you think it's harder for women to make peace with deeply flawed mothers or deeply flawed fathers?

MARTHA SOUTHGATE
is the author of three acclaimed previous novels, most recently
The Fall of Rome
and
Third Girl from the Left
, and other works that have been widely anthologized. She has written for
Essence, Premiere
, the
New York Daily News
, and the
New York Times.
A graduate of Smith College, she has an MFA in creative writing from Goddard and has taught at Brooklyn College and the New School. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two children.

Other Algonquin Readers Round Table Novels

A Friend of the Family
, a novel by Lauren Grodstein

Pete Dizinoff has a thriving medical practice in suburban New Jersey, a devoted wife, a network of close friends, an impressive house, and a son, Alec, now nineteen, on whom he's pinned all his hopes. But Pete never counted on Laura, his best friend's daughter, setting her sights on his only son. Lauren Grodstein's riveting novel charts a father's fall from grace as he struggles to save his family, his reputation, and himself.

“Suspense worthy of Hitchcock … [Grodstein] is a terrific storyteller.” —
The New York Times Book Review

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-61620-017-6

The Girl Who Fell from the Sky
, a novel by Heidi W. Durrow

In the aftermath of a family tragedy, a biracial girl must cope with society's ideas of race and class in this acclaimed novel, winner of the Bellwether Prize for fiction addressing issues of social justice.

“Affecting, exquisite … Durrow's powerful novel is poised to find a place among classic stories of the American experience.”
—The Miami Herald

“Like
Catcher in the Rye
or
To Kill a Mockingbird
, Durrow's debut features voices that will ring in the ears long after the book is closed.” —
The Denver Post

Winner of the Bellwether Prize for Fiction

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-61620-015-2

Pictures of You
, a novel by Caroline Leavitt

Two women running away from their marriages collide on a foggy highway. The survivor of the fatal accident is left to pick up the pieces not only of her own life but of the lives of the devastated husband and fragile son that the other woman left behind. As these three lives intersect, the book asks, How well do we really know those we love and how do we open our hearts to forgive the unforgivable?

“An expert storyteller … Leavitt teases suspense out of the greatest mystery of all—the workings of the human heart.”

—
Booklist

“Magically written, heartbreakingly honest … Caroline Leavitt is one of those fabulous, incisive writers you read and then ask yourself, Where has she been all my life?” —Jodi Picoult

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-56512-631-2

The Ghost at the Table
, a novel by Suzanne Berne

When Frances arranges to host Thanksgiving at her idyllic New England farmhouse, she envisions a happy family reunion, one that will include her estranged sister, Cynthia. But as Thanksgiving Day arrives, the tension between Frances and Cynthia mounts, as each struggles with a different version of the mysterious circumstances surrounding their mother's death twenty-five years earlier.

“Wholly engaging, the perfect spark for launching a rich conversation around your own table.”

—The Washington Post Book World

“A crash course in sibling rivalry.” —
O: The Oprah Magazine

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-56512-579-7

In the Time of the Butterflies
, a novel by Julia Alverez

In this extraordinary novel, the voices of Las Mariposas (The Butterflies), Minerva, Patria, María Teresa, and Dedé, speak across the decades to tell their stories about life in the Dominican Republic under General Rafael Leonidas Trujillo's dictatorship. Through the art and magic of Julia Alvarez's imagination, the martyred butterflies live again in this novel of valor, love, and the human cost of political oppression.

A National Endowment for the Arts Big Read selection

“A gorgeous and sensitive novel … A compelling story of courage, patriotism, and familial devotion.” —
People

“A magnificent treasure for all cultures and all time.”

—St. Petersburg Times

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-56512-976-4

How the García Girls Lost Their Accents
,

a novel by Julia Alvarez

In Julia Alvarez's brilliant and buoyant first novel, the García sisters, newly arrived from the Dominican Republic, tell their most intimate stories about how they came to be at home—and not at home—in America.

“A clear-eyed look at the insecurity and yearning for a sense of belonging that are part of the immigrant experience … Movingly told.” —
The Washington Post Book World

“Subtle … Powerful … Reveals the intricacies of family, the impact of culture and place, and the profound power of language.”
—The San Diego Tribune

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-56512-975-7

A Reliable Wife
, a novel by Robert Goolrick

Rural Wisconsin, 1907. In the bitter cold, Ralph Truitt stands alone on a train platform anxiously awaiting the arrival of the woman who answered his newspaper ad for “a reliable wife.” The woman who arrives is not the one he expects in this
New York Times
#1 bestseller about love and madness, longing and murder.

“[A] chillingly engrossing plot … Good to the riveting end.”

— USA Today

“Deliciously wicked and tense … Intoxicating.”

—The Washington Post

“A rousing historical potboiler.”
—The Boston Globe

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN-13: 978-1-56512-977-1

Water for Elephants
, a novel by Sara Gruen

As a young man, Jacob Jankowski is tossed by fate onto a rickety train, home to the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. Amid a world of freaks, grifters, and misfits, Jacob becomes involved with Marlena, the beautiful young equestrian star; her husband, a charismatic but twisted animal trainer; and Rosie, an untrainable elephant who is the great gray hope for this third-rate show. Now in his nineties, Jacob at long last reveals the story of their unlikely yet powerful bonds, ones that nearly shatters them all.

“[An] arresting new novel …With a showman's expert timing, [Gruen] saves a terrific revelation for the final pages, transforming a glimpse of Americana into an enchanting escapist fairy tale.”
—The New York Times Book Review

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-56512-560-5

Breakfast with Buddha
, a novel by Roland Merullo

When his sister tricks him into taking her guru, a crimson-robed monk, on a trip to their childhood home, Otto Ringling, a confirmed skeptic, is not amused. Six days on the road with an enigmatic holy man who answers every question with a riddle is not what he'd planned. But along the way, Otto is given the remarkable opportunity to see his world—and more important, his life—through someone else's eyes.

“Enlightenment meets
On the Road
in this witty, insightful novel.” —
The Boston Sunday Globe

“A laugh-out-loud novel that's both comical and wise … balancing irreverence with insight.”
—The Louisville Courier-Journal

An Algonquin Readers Round Table Edition with Reading Group Guide and Other Special Features • Fiction • ISBN 978-1-56512-616-9

Between Here and April
,

a novel by Deborah Copaken Kogan

When a deep-rooted memory suddenly surfaces, Elizabeth Burns becomes obsessed with the long-ago disappearance of her childhood friend April Cassidy.

Other books

Last Kiss in Tiananmen Square by Lisa Zhang Wharton
Sons of Angels by Rachel Green
SovereignsChoice by Evangeline Anderson
Lydia's Party: A Novel by Hawkins, Margaret
Moonlight by Jewel, Carolyn
Moonstar by David Gerrold
The Japanese Corpse by Janwillem Van De Wetering
The Left Hand Of God by Hoffman, Paul