For Book Clubs

The Same Bright Stars Reading Group Guide

Ethan Joella

This reading group guide for The Same Bright Stars includes an introduction,  discussion questions, and ideas for enhancing your book club. The suggested  questions are intended to help your reading group find new and interesting  angles and topics for your discussion. We hope that these ideas will enrich  your conversation and increase your enjoyment of the book.

Introduction

Jack Schmidt spends every waking moment either working at Schmidt’s—the  Rehoboth Beach restaurant that has been in his family for three generations— or thinking about work. Though he vowed never to be like his father, who died  

in charge of the place, Jack finds himself at midlife and in the same position.  Running Schmidt’s has cost Jack his health, his fiancée, and his freedom, and  though it’s given him something invaluable in return—a sense of belonging  among his chosen family and staff—he’s aching for a break.  

When the restaurant group DelDine offers to buy Schmidt’s for a hefty sum  and secrets from his past start creeping back, Jack is forced to grapple with a  nagging question: Do we need to let go of the past to realize our best futures? 

Topics & Questions for Discussion

1. Think of some of the relationships between major characters—Jack and  Kitty, Jack and Genevieve, Genevieve and Ziggy, Jack and his father—and  discuss how grief either brings these characters together or pushes them  apart. 

2. On page 36, Jack recalls the relationship between Kitty’s mother and  father, saying, “They needed each other but weren’t in love with each  other.” Is needing each other or is being in love more important in  a marriage? Are there other relationships in the book that could be  described this way?  

3. On page 46, we see Jack’s house for the first time, including the empty  studio above his garage. What might the empty studio symbolize?

4. Many times throughout the novel, Jack laments that he’s often  disappointed by the people he loves. Do you think this is true, or is this  just Jack’s perception? 

5. Consider the character of Ziggy. Are we to judge him by the person he  once was—an innocent child who lost a parent too early—or by the person  he becomes and his behavior in the present? Does Ziggy have a chance to  be forgiven? 

6. Did you believe that Genevieve was stealing from Jack? Why do you think  he was so quick to suspect that she was? 

7. Focusing on work is a coping mechanism for many of the characters— for Genevieve, for Nicole, for Jack especially. Is this devotion to work a  healthy coping strategy? Is there a relationship between the characters  experiencing the most profound grief and those who work the hardest? 

8. The town of Rehoboth Beach is undergoing a rapid transformation  throughout the novel, mostly at the hands of DelDine. Is DelDine a  purely evil force, or are they offering some good to the community? 

9. Why is Jack so angry at Alexis in the present day? Does he have a right to  feel this way? How might this scenario have played out differently? 10.Consider Jack and Deacon’s friendship. How do they support each other?  What would Jack’s life be like without Deacon? 

11. Were you surprised by Nicole’s actions in the final scenes? Why do you  think she told Jack what she did? 

12. Why do you think Patrick is so resistant to the idea of meeting Jack? Do  you think they might meet in the future? 

Enhance Your Book Club

1. Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, is a delightful vacation destination!  Plan a trip to the famous beach and boardwalk and be sure to  visit Browseabout Books. 

2. Some of the breaks between chapters are sections from the  fictional Rehoboth Beach guidebook. Write a guidebook page  for your hometown or favorite city. 

3. Read Ethan Joella’s other books—A Little Hope and A Quiet Life—and compare them. Are there some common themes between  his works? 

 

For Book Clubs

A Quiet Life Reading Group Guide

Ethan Joella

This reading group guide for A QUIET LIFE includes an introduction, discussion questions, and ideas for enhancing your book club. The suggested questions are intended to help your reading group find new and interesting angles and topics for your discussion. We hope that these ideas will enrich your conversation and increase your enjoyment of the book.

Introduction

Chuck Ayers can’t decide if he should make the annual trip to Hilton Head without his late wife, Cat. Ella Burke works two jobs to make ends meet and fill the hours while she waits for news about her missing daughter. Kirsten Bonato put her aspirations for veterinary school aside after her father’s sudden death and finds comfort working at an animal shelter.

These three individuals’ stories intersect in surprising and heart-warming ways as each person discovers how to move forward with their lives. A Quiet Life is a tender, emotionally powerful novel that explores how grief can push us toward unexpected new experiences and connections.

Topics & Questions for Discussion

1. While replaying through his long relationship with his late wife, Cat, Chuck feels “as if he’s in a supermarket of guilt, and his cart’s overflowing” (chapter one). Several other characters also express similar remorse over lost loved ones. How does guilt function throughout the novel?

2. In her daughter Riley’s absence, Ella can’t help picturing her everywhere she goes. “She imagines going to the market and making a French picnic for Riley” (chapter two). What is it about someone’s absence that makes their presence loom larger? Who else experiences this in the book?

3. Natasha and Cat’s friendship made Chuck nervous and even jealous at times. What was it about their connection that sparked his reaction? Compare this to Grayson’s lack of jealousy when Kirsten opens up to him. Discuss why these characters react so differently in their respective situations.

4. Kirsten essentially put her life on hold after her father’s sudden death and “feels like she’s waiting for a sign” to restart it (chapter four). How often do people rely on “signs” to make life decisions? Why might that be? Do you find yourself waiting for signals in your own life?

5. Both Kirsten and Ella had traumatic experiences losing family members, and Chuck experienced trauma as a soldier in Vietnam. How does trauma display itself throughout the novel?

6. Kirsten has chemistry with both David and Grayson. She can even imagine what a future would look like with each of them. What did you make of this love triangle? Were you rooting for one outcome over another?

7. Ella’s husband betrays her trust. Chuck feared that Natasha might swindle him and Cat if they let her stay with them. How do people respond to betrayal throughout the novel?

8. A Quiet Life is about both small and huge acts of kindness. When was the last act of kindness you performed, witnessed, or experienced?

9. David’s struggle with his ex-wife over their kids mirrors Ella’s custody tensions with her husband, Kyle. What do we gain as readers by juxtaposing these dynamics?

10. Kirsten and David open up to each other about their personal experiences with loss, which is a cathartic conversation for both of them. How can sharing feelings of grief improve one’s mental health and relationships?

11. While Kirsten and Chuck are both dealing with permanent losses, Ella’s missing daughter has the potential to come back into her life. What effect does this comparison have on the overall story that’s being told?

12. Kirsten and Chuck both try to gain closure by searching out emblems of the past, but neither situation goes exactly as expected. Talk about closure and why the characters feel the need for it.

13. Discuss the shift from Kirsten’s thought that “loss is everywhere” in chapter twenty-eight to “love everywhere. . . . And life has this possibility of deeper love, always around the corner” in chapter thirty-three. How does the novel build to this uplifting conclusion? How might we adopt this into our own lives?

Enhance Your Book Club

1. Visit your local animal shelter! If you’re interested, ask if it’s possible to volunteer.

2. Purchase a sketchbook and carry it with you, sketching when inspiration strikes, like Cat.

3. Read Ethan Joella’s first novel, A Little Hope, and discuss the ongoing themes and also how the two books differ.

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A Little Hope Reading Group Guide

Ethan Joella

This reading group guide for A LITTLE HOPE includes an introduction, discussion questions, and ideas for enhancing your book club. The suggested questions are intended to help your reading group find new and interesting angles and topics for your discussion. We hope that these ideas will enrich your conversation and increase your enjoyment of the book.

Introduction

Greg Tyler has a successful career, a loving wife and daughter, and a dizzying cancer diagnosis that has him asking himself hard questions. From there, A Little Hope sprawls out through the Tyler’s network of friends and neighbors, and each character finds they are far from alone in experiencing pain, loss, and fear.

A Little Hope is a deeply affecting debut novel about the personal struggles of friends and family living in a Connecticut town. It is a story that celebrates the power of small but genuine interactions in the face of challenging times.

Topics & Questions for Discussion

1. Greg confronts his diagnosis in a head-on, almost aggressive way. What do you make of his emotional response?

2. Do you or have you lived in a small town? What is your network of friends and family like? How does your own compare to that of the characters?

3. Consider Ahmed and Damon’s friendship. How do you think their relationship compares to most male friendships? What does their dynamic add to the novel?

4. When Alex and Kay tell Greg and Freddie about Alex’s daughter, Freddie reflects she could forgive Greg for anything, “if it meant they could get to Alex and Kay’s age.” Each relationship informs others throughout the novel. What can be learned from having a variety of perspectives at different stages of life?

5. Missed or lost connections are an important theme throughout A Little Hope. Consider what could have been for some of these characters if things had been slightly different. How do they cope with the reality of their situations?

6. Several difficult conversations take place throughout the book. Pick a conversation that resonated most with you. Do you feel sympathy for one character over the other, or is it not so clear-cut?

7. Some characters are dealing with fresh grief while others are managing grief from events years prior. How do people process grief differently? What does the novel suggest about mourning?

8. Toward the end of the book, Darcy, Luke’s mother, buys her granddaughter Lizzie a red kite. This moment is reflected on the front cover of the novel. What do you think the kite might represent?

9. The novel begins and ends with Freddie’s thoughts on “nothing.” In “Rain Day” she thinks, “This thing with Greg might keep being nothing.” What do you make of her thoughts at the end? Discuss your ideas in the context of the overall story.

10. A Little Hope features a variety of sympathetic and complex characters. Were you drawn to any particular character? Discuss who your favorites were and why.

Enhance Your Book Club

1. Ginger reminisces about Luke performing on stage in chapter five, “Yes to Love.” She says that “he could switch from Sinatra to Elton John to Bon Jovi.” Pick your favorite range of songs from these artists for a book club playlist.

2. The chapters “Trying to Wake Up” and “The Star in the Box” are letters between Luke Crowley and his mother. Write a letter to someone you haven’t spoken to in a while or someone you’d like to reconnect with.

3.Consider buying a kite and going to your local park to fly it!