QUESTIONS
Talk about the characters
Sean
Andy
Clive Davenport
Karen Shield
Do you have fond memories of your primary or secondary
school? Have your opinions changed, positively or negatively, in the course of
time?
Do you think unemployed people spend their time doing
things that when they were employed couldn’t do?
Graham Swift like to emphasize situations talking
about the weather. Did you find an instance of this in this story?
Why do you think a funeral is a good occasion for
gathering people?
What kind/class of people attended the funeral? How do
you know?
Why does the narrator describe their suits as
“interview suits”?
Do you think she had left her bag in the bus on
purpose?
Why do you imagine Karen and her friend did at Cheryl Hudson’s?
When the narrator says the “TV was on”, did he want to
mean something else?
There are some details to show us that Mrs Shield isn't drunk. What are these? Why does the writer insist on this?
“Had she done this before?” What’s your opinion?
Mrs Shield is very practical: how does the writer show
this?
What do you know about In Praise of Older Women,
by Stephen Vizinczey, or Elogio de la madrastra, by Vargas Llosa, or
about the film Ce que le jour doit à la nuit?
Would you have another point of view of the situation
in which the boy was involved, if instead of a boy it had been a girl, and
instead of a woman, a man?
After making love, he tried to work out his bearings.
Does this feeling have any relation to the saying “Post coitum omne animal
triste est, sive gallus et mulier”?
Was Sean a bit in love with Karen’s mother? How do you
know?
Can you imagine how the life would be going on for the mother, the
daughter, Sean and Andy?
Were those days for Sean the best days?
What is Sean’s moral lesson?
VOCABULARY
hearse, spillage, turnout, blustery, daffy, milling, makeshift,
grim, barn, craned, drag, stance, abuse, rebuke, outbreaks, drab, flouncy, headpiece,
tarty, fetching, sight, smothered, cutely, perky, unredeemed, scruff, blunt, cocky,
old baggage, curb, the big V, tugged, goody-goody, delve, primness, sternly, fluffy,
deed, ducking, cluttered, glow, bearings, peck, daubed, slab, goggling, prat, lovey-dovey,
preening, big-time, jump, get the hots