Book Autopsy:

A Book Discussion Program with Julie MacShane

Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn: Download Cover

Wednesday, September 22, 2010, at 7:00 PM

participants will read and discuss

 Sharp Objects

by Gillian Flynn

Please join facilitator Julie McShane for an interesting discussion. All are welcome!

Copies of the book are available at the Circulation Desk.

If you watch any contemporary crime drama, you know the importance of an autopsy, but what exactly is a "book autopsy"?

Questions to be asked:

--Are the characters believable?  Do they follow a full arc?  Do they make a fundamental change in their nature or do they force a change in their environment?

--Does the plot deliver?  Is it consistent?  Are parts too slow?

 --What parts of the book are confusing?  What are the best written parts?

--What is the author trying to say, if anything?

--How do our cultural upbringings affect how we read the book/like the book?

From Booklist

This impressive debut novel is fueled by stylish writing and compelling portraits of desperate housewives, southern style. Troubled newspaper reporter Camille Preaker is sent back to her Missouri hometown in a bid to get the inside scoop on the murders of two preteen girls--both were strangled and had their teeth removed. Almost as nasty as the brutal crimes are Camille's twisted family dynamics. She intends to stay with her zombielike mother, whom she has hardly spoken to in 8 years; her cipher of a stepfather; and her twisted, overly precocious 13-year-old half sister. Wading back into the insular social dynamics of the town proves to be a stressful experience for Camille, a reformed cutter whose body is riddled with the scars of words such as wicked and cupcake. In a particularly seductive narrative style, Flynn adopts the cynical, knowing patter of a weary reporter, but it is her portraits of the town's backstabbing, social-climbing, bored, and bitchy females that provoke her sharpest and most entertaining writing. A stylish turn on dark crimes and even darker psyches. Joanne Wilkinson
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updated 08/31/10