Playing Botticelli
by Liza Nelson
List Price: $23.95
Pages: 279
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 0399146016
Publisher: Putnam Pub Group
"Playing Botticelli is one of those wonderful novels that treats the mother-daughter relationship
for what it ispart minefield, part love nest." Pat Conroy
Liza Nelson's debut novel tells the story of Godiva Blue, an artist, single mother, and self-proclaimed
visionary, who believes she has found a haven for herself and her daughter,
Dylan, in the backwaters of northwest Florida in the mid-eighties. A refugee
of the late sixties, Godiva revels in a self-reliant existence that allows
her free reign of her eccentricities.
But Godiva, who has buried pieces of her past, discovers that she cannot handpick the parts of her
life that she would prefer to box away. On a casual trip to the post office,
she glances at the FBI most wanted poster and recognizes the face of the
man with whom she conceived Dylan while attending an antiwar rally sixteen
years earlier. Meanwhile, a combination of pride and chance keep Godiva
from recognizing that fifteen-year-old Dylan is chafing under her mother's
overwhelming personality. When Dylan discovers the poster, which Godiva
has taken and hidden in a rare moment of self-doubt, she begins to build
a fantasy centered on reuniting with a father she has never met, setting
herand Godiva'scourse.
Beginning with Godiva's point of view, then alternating throughout the novel with Dylan's
perspective, Playing Botticelli offers the frank and funny juxtaposition
of a mother's vision of the world with her daughter's reality.
Through their individual voices, Nelson movingly explores motherhood and
daughterhood, the ties that bind as well as those that must bend and even
break.
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1. In many mother-daughter stories, the reader's sympathy, as well as
the author's, is weighted ultimately toward one or the other. As the
reader, did you find Godiva and Dylan equally sympathetic? Does the author
seem to favor one or another?
2. In discussing her first novel, Liza Nelson has said, "Whether we love them or hate them,
obey them or rebel against them, we are, like Dylan Blue, in a permanent
state of reaction to our parents." What clues does Godiva share about
her relationship with her own mother? How does Godiva's mothering
change, and remain the same, when her own daughter begins to rebel against
her?
3. While Dylan and Godava are both fully developed protagonists, they see each other in limited
ways. How do the roles of "mother" and "daughter" limit these characters
perception of each other and of themselves?
4. By the standards of the "nice ladies" of Esmeralda, Godiva's language, particularly
in the first twenty pages, might be considered "coarse." How does her
voice affect a reader? What about the story's more lyrical passages?
5. Does Dylan sound her age, or do you ever notice her voice sounding older or younger than
her years? At certain points throughout the novel, she catches herself
sounding like Godiva. Is this a sign of her growing maturity or does it
reveal something else?
6. How do men fit into the lives of the novel's female characters? What is it about Joe Rainey
that so attracts Godiva? Would she have been as drawn to David Balboa
if they were to meet as adults? Are the men (and boys) in the novel believable?
7. Dylan's encounter with Randall "Spider" Gervais parallels Godiva's brief affair with
Hank seventeen years earlier. What do their experiences reveal about the
way sexual adventures and romantic relationships have changed or remained
constant over time?
8. How does Dylan's fantasy of being adopted by Reverend and Mrs. Braselton connect with her
desire to meet the father she's never known?
9. David Balboa never owns up to being Dylan's father. As the reader, do you think he was?
Why does or doesn't his physical paternity actually matter?
10. Why does Godiva feel such a need to be in control at the beginning of the novel? Is it
connected to her being a single parent, or more basic to her character?
11. This novel explores many forms of friendship. What attracts one character to another? What
are the similarities and differences between Godiva's friendship with
Louise Culpepper and Dylan's friendship with Cass? What different
bonds does Godiva form while visiting the hospital, and Dylan while on
the road?
12. What will life be like for Godiva and Dylan once Dylan returns home?
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"Playing Botticelli is a tough, tender, and unabashed meditation on the joys and dangers of motherhood and the longings of a daughter for her father. Elegant, moving, and true."Pam Durban, author of The Laughing Place
"The fabulously named Godiva Blue is a vividly drawn reclamation project from my generation. But her daughter, Dylan, steals the book."Pat Conroy, author of Beach Music
"Liza Nelson is a terrific writer, and these are wonderful characters."Anne Lamott, author of Bird by Bird