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Reading Group Guide
Strand of a Thousand Pearls
A Novel
by Dorit Rabinyan

List Price: $13.95
Pages: 288
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0375760032
Publisher: Random House

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About This Book


Redolent with the scent of lilac and oleander blossoms, and bursting with the flavors of quinces and overripe plums, Strand of a Thousand Pearls is the story of the imagined and actual marriages of the Azizyan girls, their years of yearning, restless and impatient, and the truth of their engagements, miles away from the enchanted realm and imaginary heroes of their dreams.

Six years ago, Dorit Rabinyan burst onto the scene with Persian Brides, a novel that established her as a writer of incandescent spirit with a gift for spinning wry, magical tales about the vagaries of love and marriage. In Strand of a Thousand Pearls, she has given us a bitter-sweet fable about desires fulfilled and denied—about married love and carnal love, about mother's love and the kind of love that vanishes one night without warning, like an evaporated dream.

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1. Many novels appeal to sights and sounds, but Strand of a Thousand Pearls is suffused by smells — mama's quinces and plum jams simmer on the stovetop, ripened guava perfumes the air, and sweet-scented sweat springs from the sisters' tangled bodies. How does this emphasis on the third sense heighten your experience of the novel? Discuss the affects of aromas in creating atmosphere, heightening conflict and underscoring a sense of intimacy in the novel.

2. The Azizyan girls are tied so strongly to the bridegrooms of their dreams that little contentment is possible within their actual marriages. Evaluate the conflict between dreams and reality throughout the novel. Is it harmful to have dreams?

3. The narrator at times acts as omniscient third person, and at other times engages us in the first person, taking on the role of a seemingly unnamed Azizyan sibling. Discuss how this voice both complicates and illuminates the action of the novel.

4. Dorit Rabinyan writes about the "soundless tears of emigrants," in which are blended both fear and regret (p.63). Discuss this theme of emigration and the importance of homeland in the novel. How are cultural traditions sustained, mingled, discarded and passed on to the new generation of Azizyans?

5. For Solly, true contentment lies in the "beauty" of life and family, while Iran grumbles that it is not beauty but "good luck" that really matters (p.148). Discuss how the parents' individual life philosophies both hinder and help their children, and how the reliance on beauty and luck can doom the children's self perception.

6. Iran laments "the honesty that families lose as they mature, and the gaps which appear when the individualities take shape" (p.11). Are these cleavages necessarily part of growing older? Consider whether growth and individuality are in conflict with the familial bond.

7. Discuss why Mama thinks it is important for her daughters to learn to "cook without measurements." How is food a means of perpetuating tradition and strengthening family in the novel?

8. The insomniac Marcelle finally sleeps on the night of her bungled wedding, only to wake the next morning and discover "that her love was dead" (p.176). Describe how Marcelle's immersion in fictional romances tricked her into a fantasy of love. What role does imagination play in desire?

9. Dorit Rabinyan has been hailed as the voice of her generation in Israel, yet her novel makes scant mention of the conflict that so dominates the news. To what extent is it a writer's duty to confront the political situation of her time and country in her work, or is her ultimate duty to her own creativity and imagination?

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Critical Praise

"A lovely story with compelling characters showcased subtly against the realities of contemporary life in the Middle East."
USA Today


"A formidable talent."
San Francisco Chronicle


"Rabinyan's story is, above all, about women....The marriage stories overlap and weave together in a rich pattern that resembles a parable or family legend."
Los Angeles Times


"Spellbinding...a literary love story of crushed dreams, part family drama, part modern-day fairy tale."
Glamour

 
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