Peachtree Road
by Anne Rivers Siddons
List Price: $6.99
Pages: 832
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0061097233
Publisher: HarperCollins
Along a quiet street on a hill at the outskirts of Atlanta live a dying
breed of Southern aristocrats. Growing up in sprawling mansions, and attended
to by black servants, these Buckhead families form a tight nucleus of
wealth and power. This privileged way of life is about to be shattered
by the nascent Civil Rights Movement, and the arrival of the headstrong,
exuberant beauty, Lucy Bondurant. From the moment young Lucy, her siblings,
and their mother, Willa, arrive on their in-law's front doorstep, life
in the Bondurant mansion at 2500 Peachtree Road will never be the same.
Lucy and her shy older cousin, Sheppard Gibbs Bondurant III, instantly
forge a tight, obsessive bond with one another that will leave a trail
of ruin and misery in its path. As Lucy and Shep grow from children to
adults, it quickly becomes clear that Shep will never be the gregarious
and suave Southern gentleman his family expects, and Lucy will never become
a quiet and demur Southern belle. As the rigid aristocratic social codes
exert more pressures on the young cousins, their fierce infatuation with
one another grows stronger. When Shep attempts to break away from his
cousin and lead a separate life in New York as a librarian, Lucy begins
to experience severe manic episodes. Swerving from hospital beds to bad
marriages and back again, Lucy desperately searches for the father she
never had, and finds, instead, heartbreak and betrayal. As Atlanta transforms
itself from a sleepy Southern town into a thriving modern metropolis,
the Bondurants struggle with a legacy of incest and their own frustrated,
impossible desires.
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1. Peachtree Road begins with the famous sentence, "The South killed
Lucy Bondurant Chastain Venable on the day she was born." How so? What
aspects of the South laid the groundwork for her "textbook murder" before
Lucy was even born? How was her destruction "classical in concept?" Could
anyone have saved her?
2. Both Lucy and her mother, Willa, were outsiders to the world of Peachtree Road. How
did they each adapt to their new environment? What steps do they each
take to insure their own protection? Who was more successful, and why?
What price did each of them pay for their adaptation?
3. Why were Lucy and Shep so obsessed with one another? How did they each define themselves
by the other? By always being Lucy's "rescuing knight," did Shep exacerbate
or ameliorate Lucy's manic behavior? How much responsibility does he bear
for Lucy's death? Was it a murder, or a suicide?
4. Why does the novel begin with Lucy's funeral? How does the flashback structure affect your
experience of Shep's tale? What is the significance of funerals for the
Peachtree Road society?
5. By the time Malory turned eighteen, Shep, "had learned, finally, the value of love held lightly
in an open hand." What does he mean by that? How had he come to this realization?
What are some loves of his life that were NOT "held lightly in an open
hand?"
6. Shep remarks frequently on the difficulties faced by Southern women. Do the men of Peachtree Road
fare much better? What sorts of pressures do Southern men endure in the
novel?
7. How was the elder Ben Cameron the architect of his own political obsolescence? What plans
did Ben have for the Buckhead Boys, and Shep in particular? How did the
younger Peachtree Road generation fail him?
8. How would you characterize Lucy's relationship with the black people in her life? Why might she have
gravitated to their company? Why might she have so fervently adopted their
struggles as her own? Do they ultimately betray her? Or does she betray
their cause?
9. What role does incest play in the Bondurant family? How does it structure the family's
dynamic? Why do you think it is so prevalent? Is it a useful metaphor
for the entire privileged class of the South? Why or why not?
10. What role does the elder Ben Cameron play in the Civil Rights Movement? Is it odd that
he grooms his chauffeur's son for the position of mayor? Is there a contradiction
to having black servants and yet campaigning for racial equality? Do the
Camerons' servants enjoy special privileges denied to other servants on
Peachtree Road?
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