Imaginary Friend

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Imaginary Friend Page 68

by Stephen Chbosky

hE watched as the news spread over the young girl’s face. hE watched as she held her mother. hE watched as the young man professed his love and promised to raise the child as his own. hE watched as the father wondered what his grandchild would be.

  A daughter

  A son

  A sun

  A soul

  After a few minutes, the doctor ushered her family out of the room to let Mary Katherine get some much-needed rest. After all, she was sleeping for two now. As she lay on the pillow, she felt a little prickle on the back of her neck that she blamed on the air-conditioning. She scratched her neck and curled up into the blanket. She closed her eyes, and right before she fell asleep, she could have sworn she heard a sweet whisper in her ear.

  “Mary Katherine…” the sweet voice said.

  “You are having a Son.”

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  About the Author

  Stephen Chbosky is an author, director, and screenwriter. He is best known for the award-winning film adaptation of his debut novel. The Perks of Being a Wallflower spent over two years on the New York Times bestseller list and sold five million copies worldwide. He cowrote the screenplay for Disney’s live action Beauty and the Beast as well as the film adaptation of R. J. Palacio’s Wonder, which he also directed. His first feature, The Four Corners of Nowhere, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. He wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation of Rent and cocreated the postapocalyptic TV drama Jericho. Imaginary Friend is his second novel. Follow Stephen on Twitter @stephenchbosky.

  Also by Stephen Chbosky

  The Perks of Being a Wallflower

  IMAGINARY FRIEND

  Reading Group Guide

  Discussion Questions

  “I will protect you,” Christopher silently resolves to his mother at the end of Chapter 1 of Imaginary Friend. Discuss the various ways that Christopher protects his mother over the course of the novel, as well as the ways Kate protects Christopher. What does it mean to protect those you love? From what should one’s loved ones be protected? Does this impulse ultimately do more harm or good, whether in your own personal experience or in Chbosky’s novel?

  Imaginary Friend is a different genre than Chbosky’s acclaimed, celebrated debut novel, The Perks of Being a Wallflower. Have you read both books? If so, in what ways are the novels similar? In what ways are they different? If you haven’t read The Perks of Being a Wallflower, do you think you’ll now be seeking it out after reading Imaginary Friend? If you’ve already read Perks, do you think you’ll be rereading it after reading Chbosky’s second novel, or will you think of Chbosky’s debut in a different light?

  What other novels, TV shows, or movies do you feel share a kinship with Imaginary Friend? Where in the canon of horror and contemporary literary fables does Chbosky’s novel fall, in your estimation?

  What or who do you think was the cloud with the smiling face who first led Christopher into the Mission Street Woods?

  Kate chooses to raise her son Catholic, so he can grow up the same way his father had grown up; Mary Katherine, who plays an important role in the story, is also religious. Discuss the role of religion and spirituality in the novel.

  Discuss the phrase “To think it is to do it,” which Chbosky uses to explore a handful of different themes in the novel. What does the phrase mean to Mary Katherine? What does it mean to Christopher?

  Discuss the role that nightmares play in Imaginary Friend. What does Chbosky’s novel seem to suggest about the things that haunt us, whether during our waking hours or when we’re asleep?

  What conclusions can you make about the nature of evil as Chbosky describes it? Of good as Chbosky describes it?

  Imaginary Friend takes places in the months leading up to Christmas. Why do you think Chbosky chose to set this story then? What effect does the countdown to Christmas lend to the overall mood and tone of the read?

  The Perks of Being a Wallflower is, in part, famous for a handful of quotable lines like “I feel infinite” and “We accept the love we think we deserve.” If Imaginary Friend becomes, like Chbosky’s debut, a novel that readers continue to discuss for years to come, what lines from Chbosky’s newest seem most likely to you to stand the test of time? What about this novel might readers remember long after finishing it?

  How does this book help you to better understand people with mental and/or social disabilities? Does it make you think differently about the young or old people, or see them in a different light?

  What do you think is the scariest part of Imaginary Friend? Explain why.

  What was your favorite part of Imaginary Friend? Explain why.

 

 

 


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