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Reading Group Guide

Discussion Questions

The Wooden Nickel: A Novel

1. How would you characterize Lucky and Ronette's relationship? How is it different from Lucky's relationship with Sarah? Do you think one is healthier or stronger than the other?

2. Seeing a cocktail party on an expensive sailboat, Lucky says, "Every one of them things is some son of a bitch screwing the working man" (page 121). Lucky has a very negative view of tourists and the summer people who come to Orphan Point, though much of his livelihood depends on them. Do you think his resentment is justified? What might account for his reaction to these outsiders?

3. Lucky and Sarah's son, Kyle, and their daughter, Kristen, pursue divergent paths in life, yet Lucky doesn't seem entirely comfortable with either of them. Discuss Lucky's relationship with each of his children. In the final chapters Lucky tries to run down Kyle's boat, while he buys Kristen the car of her dreams. Why does he end up treating his two children so differently?

4. Lucky sees his decision to work for Moto as a betrayal. Why is this such a wrenching choice? What motivates him to go forward despite his reservations? Can you sympathize with his decision, or do you think he should have acted otherwise?

5. After learning about Ronette, Sarah tells Lucky, "Lucas, don't you see? Nothing is yours anymore. Not me, not this house, nothing. You don't even own yourself" (page 146). What does she mean by this?

6. What are the factors, besides simple desire, that propel Lucky into his affair with Ronette?

7. Discuss Sarah's reactions to Lucky's infidelity and to Ronette's pregnancy. Do you think her responses are appropriate? Do you think she might have acted differently in the first instance if Lucky had shown more remorse about the affair?

8. In a sense, Lucky is the author of his own demise — much of what befalls him results from his own actions. Do you think there is an inevitability to the difficulties Lucky experiences, or does he bring them all upon himself?

9. Consider Ronette's perspective: Why would she choose Lucky as an escape route from her marriage? Unlike other blind forces operating in the novel, Ronette seems to have a plan. What do we know of her strategies and success in getting what she wants?

10. By the end of the novel Lucky has lost his wife, his boat, and his occupation and has traded his waterfront home for a house trailer. Given all this, is there any way we could say he is better off?

11. Identify other relationships —apart from his entanglements with people —that Lucky is involved in. How important are they to him and to the novel?

12. Lucky spends a lot of energy criticizing and condemning the world as he sees it. But what positive values does he seem to hold?

13. How do you interpret the novel's ending? What do you think happens to Lucky and Ronette after the last scene? Do you agree with the author's decision to leave the ending ambiguous?

14. The novel is seen through Lucky's eyes and told in his voice. How might the story be different if told from the perspective of one of the other characters?

The Wooden Nickel: A Novel
by William Carpenter

  • Publication Date: March 5, 2003
  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Back Bay Books
  • ISBN-10: 0316089745
  • ISBN-13: 9780316089746