Night Ride Home
by Barbara Esstman
List Price: $13.00
Pages: 336
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 006097754X
Publisher: HarperCollins
Set in a small town outside of St. Louis shortly after World War II, Night
Ride Home is the story of a family coming to terms with the death
of its eldest child, Simon. Simon's mother Nora boards and trains horses
on a farm nherited from her grandmother, though Nora's husband Neal resents
her passion for them. After Simon is killed in a riding accident, Neal
shoots the horse that Simon was riding. The horse was Nora's favorite--a
beautiful and spirited Arabian. Neal then sends the rest of the horses
away, and tries to sell the farm. When Nora refuses to leave, Neal moves
to Chicago and takes their daughter Clea with him. Neal seeks to define
the life Nora will take up in the wake of Simon's death. But another man,
Nora's teenage love, Ozzie, returns to the farm in an attempt to help
Nora piece together a life of her own choosing.
In five alternating voices, Night Ride Home
examines both the bitter grief and the binding love of the extended Mahler
family. Neal's voice rationalizes his desire to control his family. Nora's
voice stumbles through the maze of her sorrow. Clea, the daughter, walks
a fine line between her parents. Nora's mother, Maggie, examines decisions
made in her own her life. And, finally, the ranch hand Ozzie opens his
battle-weary heart to love.
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1. Simon Mahler's grandmother Maggie laments: "A child should
not die before his parents. A terrible disorder was at large in the world."
But Simon's death creates a "disorder" that goes beyond the
tragedy inherent in the loss of a child. In many ways, Simon was the hub
that connected the characters who narrate the novel. What did Simon mean
to the other characters?
2. The novel reveals a variety of responses
to grief. The townspeople admire Neal for his restrained response to Simon's
death, and shake their heads at Nora's "hysterics." But experts
tell us that an emotional response to loss is a normal, healthy response.
Contrast how Neal and Nora respond to Simon's death. Are there "right"
and "wrong" ways to grieve? What are they?
3. When the tragedy occurs, Clea is a girl
on the brink of becoming a woman. She retreats to her room and both literally
and figuratively attempts to disappear. What has been modeled for her
by the women in her life? Does she repeat or rebel against what she has
seen?
4. While some experts contend that electroshock
therapy has been used effectively to control depression, Esstman's research
revealed that shock therapy was also used during the time period of Night
Right Home on women deemed too independent by their husbands. What
do you think was behind Neal's decision to subject Nora to shock therapy--a
desire to help Nora or to subdue her independence? What responses to "undesirable
behavior" occur today?
5. Ozzie was wounded in W.W.II and spent years
wandering. He tells us that he "had dreams a lot, about dead men
that I believed I could have saved." Today we might say that a veteran
like Ozzie suffered from post-traumatic stress syndrome. How does the
war appear to have affected Ozzie in ways of which even he is not aware?
6. Farm life is tied closely to the natural
cycle of the seasons. The four sections of the novel correspond to the
four seasons--spring through winter. What happens in each season? Do the
events of each season reflect our common notions of spring, summer, fall
and winter?
7. Late in the novel, Nora breaks down in Ozzie's
truck after he has brought her to see an Arabian filly, Malaak. Why does
Ozzie bring her back to talk to the filly's owner? What is he asking her
to do? How is this the turning point of the novel for Nora?
8. Quotations from Chilean poet Pablo Neruda
precede each section of the book. How do the epigraphs reflect the events
and the themes of the novel?
9. Five characters take turns narrating the chapters
of this book. Esstman has said that these are "all characters who have
buried part of the truth." What do various characters see that others
have "buried"? How would this novel be changed if it had a single
narrator?
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