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Fiona
Range
READER'S GUIDE
INTRODUCTION
It's a typical, post-party morning for Fiona Range. She's got an
awful hangover, no memory of how she got home, and a snoring, unknown
man in her bed. As Fiona extricates herself from the unconscious
stranger's embrace, she berates herself for having—once again—partied
too hard and gotten involved in yet another one-night stand. But
Fiona's morning is about to go from bad to downright miserable when
she realizes that the "stranger" fleeing her apartment
is Brad Glidden—the husband of Fiona's friend Krissy, who
spent the previous night in the hospital giving birth to their first
child. As Fiona watches Brad burn rubber out of her driveway, she
laments, "as usual, she hadn't been thinking, hadn't cared
or been careful. And now this mess."
Mary McGarry Morris's bittersweet portrait of Fiona illustrates
how expectations can shape a life. Fiona's mother, Natalie, was
beautiful but wild—some said "trashy"—and
Patrick Grady, Fiona's supposed father, was an equally wild young
man who returned from Vietnam both physically and psychically scarred
by his experiences. Abandoned by Natalie and rejected by Patrick,
Fiona was taken in by her maternal Aunt Arlene and her husband,
the Honorable Judge Charles Hollis.
Although the Hollises provided for Fiona's material needs and raised
her alongside their own three children, there was always tension
between them. The Hollises' reserve was unspoken but its presence
was as palpable to Fiona as the ghastly scar that disfigured Patrick's
once-handsome face.
Throughout her life, "all [Fiona] wanted was someone who cared
how she felt and what she thought about the simplest things, someone
who would know when she left the room and keep glancing at the door
until she returned." This longing for affection drove young
Fiona to Todd Prescott, a local ne'er do well who promised her love
but—even years after their breakup—continually dragged
her into his own tangled affairs with drugs and the law.
No one was surprised when Fiona dropped out of college to wait on
tables at the local coffee shop while her cousins pursued more respectable
professions. And when Fiona—after having misspent her twenties
in and out of unfamiliar beds and too-familiar bars—registers
for community college and tries to turn her life around, she quickly
discovers that Dearborn, Massachusetts, is small-town America at
its best—and worst. Everyone knows everyone else's business
and, while Fiona's beauty and open-heartedness have won her a slew
of admirers, her reckless behavior and poor judgement have earned
her a bad reputation.
Fiona attempts to overcome her notoriety but—disheartened
by her family's lack of support—frequently backslides. Even
her closest cousin, Elizabeth, a schoolteacher who recently returned
to Dearborn with a doctor fiancé in tow, harshly judges Fiona's
liaison with Brad without waiting to hear Fiona's side of the story.
In her desperation for a blood connection with someone, Fiona pursues
Patrick, ignoring rumors of mental instability and violence. Just
as she imagines that her own wild streak is a legacy from her mother
Natalie, Fiona romanticizes that her volatile temper and anti-social
impulses are personality traits passed down to her from Patrick.
This time, he does not shun her advances, but the relationship that
he tries to establish is far from paternal.
The Hollises are alarmed by Fiona's increasing intimacy with Patrick
but helpless to stop it. And through him, Fiona tries to unearth
her complex family's secrets only to find herself being pulled into
the bewildering love triangle between Elizabeth, her fiancé,
and her childhood sweetheart. As the tension and danger mount, Fiona
must confront difficult truths: about her parents, her family, and
most of all about herself. Finally, she realizes that "no matter
how long or far she ran, she would always be trying to outdistance
one person and one person only—Fiona Range."
AN INTERVIEW WITH MARY MCGARRY MORRIS
Our
initial introduction to Fiona is very risqué—she's
hungover and can't even remember who the man in her bed is—why
did you choose to open the novel this way?
Instead of merely stating that FIONA RANGE is a party girl
who can't say no to a good time, I wanted to put the reader "inside"
Fiona at her most vulnerable. It was a way of conveying the remorse
and bravado that have been her hallmark. I don't consider that
scene risqué but pathetic. It is typical of the many "mornings-after"
in Fiona's life. She is a strong, intelligent woman, yet once
again her life has spun out of control. Her best excuses have
begun to wear so thin that even she is disgusted by them.
All of your novels are set in small New England towns. What draws
you to that particular setting? Did you grow up in a similar environment?
Is Dearborn based upon a real town?
Born in Connecticut, raised in Vermont, and for most of my
years now a Massachusetts resident living close by the New Hampshire
border, I am certainly a New Englander. Though Dearborn may be
fictional, it is like any American community that values fairness,
honesty, hard work, and being a good neighbor. And as in every
big city or small town, Dearborn's people are sinners, saints,
wise men, and fools, all of whom we know we are, or have been
at one time or another.
At one point in the novel, Fiona tells Terry that the Hollises "do
good deeds the way most people knock on wood. It's not so much to
help the other person as it is to cover themselves, to make themselves
feel better." Do you agree? Does Judge Hollis only help Larry
when he breaks the CVS window to make himself look good? Or does
he have some genuine philanthropic motives?
Sometimes, charity is far easier given to a stranger on a
dark night than to a pauper at our own table. Fiona is very cynical
about the Hollis family's good works because she cannot understand
the invisible wall she has always felt between herself and them.
Judge Hollis's philanthropy has always been complicated, as labyrinthine
in motive as its ensuing network of relationships. In helping
Larry the Judge's innate kindness can only be tainted by the need
to protect his family at any cost.
When Fiona and Elizabeth get together outside the Hollis home, Fiona
usually stays relatively sober while Elizabeth gets drunk. Fiona
has a healthy appetite while Elizabeth suffers from an eating disorder.
Of the two, who do you think is the most victimized by the Hollises'
expectations?
While both women suffer from their family's expectations,
Fiona's appetites seem almost healthy compared to those of her
rigid cousin. Elizabeth's sensitivities are so acute that her
own needs have come to seem like terrible weakness, failures.
As her emotional strength ebbs, she struggles to control her life
through self-denial, a twisted discipline that Fiona cannot fathom.
Chester seems to care about Fiona's welfare and offers her sound
advice. Why does Fiona resent his solicitousness as intrusion?
Throughout her life, Fiona has been criticized, analyzed,
and advised until a flip remark has become her automatic reaction.
She knows Chester's interest and concerns are genuine, but she
doesn't want to hear what he has to say when it is the truth about
herself.
Patrick is a terrifying character. How did you conceive of him?
And what do you think motivated Patrick—after years of ignoring
Fiona—to give in to her attentions?
Like so many strong characters Patrick Grady came full-blown
into early musings about the novel. For me he is the product of
betrayal on every level. Whenever he tried to do what he thought
was right it only seemed to turn on him. He has festered in frustration
and bitterness until all he has left is hate. And then Fiona's
caring persistence touches an old nerve, numbing his feral defenses.
For someone so long deprived of love, he needs her as desperately
as he once needed her mother.
Writing a novel is a lengthy process that requires a lot of discipline.
What is a typical work day like for you?
I am usually at my desk every morning at nine. The length
of a work day depends on what stage I'm at in the novel. The first
draft is the most arduous. There is pen, paper, and me, with often
only the vaguest sense of where I'm going. Four or five hours
seem to be the most I can stay at it. With the first draft completed
the work day gets longer and easier as I begin typing it all into
the computer. Time passes quickly then. Hours can be spent on
a phrase, a morning on a paragraph. There are days when suddenly
it's dinnertime and the glow from the screen is the only light
in the house. I seldom write at night, but the characters have
freest reign then, often forcing me to see what they have been
trying to tell me about themselves all along. Sometimes it's exhilarating
to know I'm on the right track after all. And sometimes it means
tossing out weeks of work and starting all over again the next
morning. The new novel I'm working on is untitled. The main character
is a man in his forties who wants little from life other than
the freedom to be left alone.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Fiona is blamed as a seductress, while the men she has relations
with are regarded as her victims. Is this an accurate assessment?
Why do you think Elizabeth doesn't blame George for sleeping with
Fiona?
2. Rudy is aware of Fiona's promiscuous reputation but does not
condemn her for it the way George does. How much of Fiona's "reputation"
is based upon small-town morality? Do you think Fiona would have
grown up differently in an urban environment?
3. Are any of the Hollises genuinely happy? Why or why not? Were
the Hollis children's feelings for Fiona affected more by their
parents' attitude toward her or by Fiona's own actions? Do they
love her?
4. Was Elizabeth ever really in love with Rudy? Did she realize
how drastically she was misleading him or were her perceptions
too skewed by her fragile mental state? Was Rudy ever really in
love with Elizabeth?
5. More than anyone else in the novel, Chester is the paternal
figure in Fiona's life. How significant is it that he is the victim
of Patrick's violence?
6. How culpable is Aunt Arlene? What was her moral responsibility
to her niece as well as to her own children?
7. What is your opinion about what happens to the Hollis family,
particularly Judge Hollis, at the end of the novel? Do you think
Aunt Arlene did the right thing in staying with him?
8. If you were Fiona, would you have remained in Dearborn after
discovering the truth about your parentage? TOP |