Book Read Free

The Last Summer of the World

Page 36

by Emily Mitchell


  5. Why does Clara feel a “tinge of condescension” from the other women in her social circle? What does art have to do with Clara’s gloomy feelings about her marriage?

  6. Describe Steichen and Clara as parents. How do their attitudes as parents contrast with their feelings for each other?

  7. Describe the different sides of France that Mitchell depicts in The Last Summer of the World. What draws Steichen, Mildred Aldrich, Marion Beckett, and other Americans to live there? How are their feelings for France different than the army pilots and photographers Steichen oversees during the war?

  8. Before she acts to destroy Steichen’s photographs, Clara vows to herself to reveal “the world’s secret mechanisms.” What does Clara mean by this statement? To what extent is she successful?

  9. When is Steichen first attracted to Marion? How do his feelings for her evolve?

  10. “Photography claims to capture the world as it really is. But in fact it does not do this; because time doesn’t stop, the world cannot be captured, only evoked. So it is the artist, not the photographer, who tells the truth.” Who says this to Steichen? Does Steichen come to believe that photographs are “lies”? Can you draw any similarity between the qualities of a photograph and the way Clara and others interpret Steichen’s behavior?

  11. Describe the cultural and legal attitudes toward marriage and divorce at the time the novel is set. Do you think that Clara’s lawsuit is justified? Was it unethical for Steichen to lie about his affair with Marion while under oath?

  12. In the novel’s final scene, Amelie returns to Steichen the brown leather case containing some of the photographs his daughter saves. Why do you think Mitchell chooses to end the novel with this scene? If you had not gone on to read the historical note at the end of the novel, what would you have imagined Steichen doing for the rest of his life after this final scene?

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  A native of London, Emily Mitchell has also lived in Japan and the United States. She received a BA from Middlebury College and an MFA from Brooklyn College. Her fiction has appeared in AGNI, Indiana Review, and New England Review. She teaches creative writing at the University of West Virginia. The Last Summer of the World is her first novel.

  MORE NORTON BOOKS WITH READING GROUP GUIDES AVAILABLE

  Diana Abu-Jaber

  Arabian Jazz

  Crescent

  Origin

  Faith Adiele

  Meeting Faith

  Rabih Alameddine

  I, the Divine

  Robert Alter

  Genesis*

  Rupa Bajwa

  The Sari Shop

  Christine Balint

  Ophelia’s Fan*

  The Salt Letters*

  Brad Barkley

  Money, Love

  Andrea Barrett

  Servants of the Map

  Ship Fever

  The Voyage of the Narwhal

  Rachel Basch

  The Passion of Reverend Nash

  Charles Baxter

  Shadow Play

  Peter C. Brown

  The Fugitive Wife

  Frederick Busch

  Harry and Catherine

  Lan Samantha Chang

  Inheritance

  Leah Hager Cohen

  House Lights

  Michael Cox

  The Meaning of Night

  Abigail De Witt

  Lili

  Rachel De Woskin

  Foreign Babes in Beijing

  Jared Diamond

  Guns, Germs, and Steel

  Jack Driscoll

  Lucky Man, Lucky Woman

  John Dufresne

  Deep in the Shade of Paradise

  Louisiana Power and Light

  Love Warps the Mind a Little

  Tony Eprile

  The Persistence of Memory

  Ellen Feldman

  The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank

  Lucy

  Susan Fletcher

  Eve Green

  Paula Fox

  The Widow’s Children

  Judith Freeman

  The Chinchilla Farm

  Betty Friedan

  The Feminine Mystique

  Barbara Goldsmith

  Obsessive Genius

  Stephen Greenblatt

  Will in the World

  Helon Habila

  Waiting for an Angel

  Sara Hall

  Drawn to the Rhythm

  Patricia Highsmith

  The Selected Stories

  Strangers on a Train

  A Suspension of Mercy

  Hannah Hinchman

  A Trail Through Leaves*

  Linda Hogan

  Power

  Pauline Holdstock

  A Rare and Curious Gift

  Ann Hood

  The Knitting Circle

  Somewhere Off the Coast of Maine

  Dara Horn

  In the Image

  The World to Come

  Janette Turner Hospital

  Due Preparations for the Plague

  The Last Magician

  Pam Houston

  Sight Hound

  Kathleen Hughes

  Dear Mrs. Lindbergh

  Helen Humphreys

  Leaving Earth

  The Lost Garden

  Erica Jong

  Fanny

  Sappho’s Leap

  Wayne Johnston

  The Custodian of Paradise

  Binnie Kirshenbaum

  Hester Among the Ruins

  Nicole Krauss

  The History of Love*

  James Lasdun

  The Horned Man

  Don Lee

  Country of Origin

  Yellow

  Joan Leegant

  An Hour in Paradise

  Vyvyane Loh

  Breaking the Tongue

  Suzanne Matson

  The Tree-Sitter

  Lisa Michaels

  Grand Ambition

  Lydia Minatoya

  The Strangeness of Beauty

  Donna Morrissey

  Sylvanus Now*

  Barbara Klein Moss

  Little Edens

  Patrick O’Brian

  The Yellow Admiral*

  Heidi Pitlor

  The Birthdays

  Jean Rhys

  Wide Sargasso Sea

  Mary Roach

  Spook*

  Josh Russell

  Yellow Jack

  Kerri Sakamoto

  The Electrical Field

  Gay Salisbury and

  Laney Salisbury

  The Cruelest Miles

  May Sarton

  Journal of a Solitude*

  Susan Fromberg Schaeffer

  Anya

  Buffalo Afternoon

  Poison

  The Snow Fox

  Jessica Shattuck

  The Hazards of Good Breeding

  Frances Sherwood

  The Book of Splendor

  Night of Sorrows

  Vindication

  Joan Silber

  Household Words

  Ideas of Heaven

  Marisa Silver

  No Direction Home

  Gustaf Sobin

  The Fly-Truffler

  In Pursuit of a Vanishing Star

  Dorothy Allred Solomon

  Daughter of the Saints

  Ted Solotaroff

  Truth Comes in Blows*

  Jean Christopher Spaugh

  Something Blue*

  Mary Helen Stefaniak

  The Turk and My Mother

  Matthew Stewart

  The Courtier and the Heretic*

  Mark Strand and

  Eavan Boland

  The Making of a Poem*

  Manil Suri

  The Death of Vishnu*

  Ellen Sussman (editor)

  Bad Girls

  Barry Unsworth

  Losing Nelson*

  Morality Play*

  The Ruby in Her Navel

  Sacred
Hunger*

  The Songs of the Kings*

  Erica Wagner

  Seizure

  Brad Watson

  The Heaven of Mercury*

  Jenny White

  The Sultan’s Seal

  *Available only on the Norton Web site: www.wwnorton.com/guides

  Copyright © 2007 by Emily Mitchell

  All rights reserved

  First published as a Norton paperback 2008

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to permissions, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 FifthAvenue, NewYork, NY 10110

  Book design by Anna Oler

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the printed edition as follows:

  Mitchell, Emily.

  The last summer of the world / Emily Mitchell.—1st ed.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-0-393-06487-2

  1. Steichen, Edward, 1879–1973—Fiction. 2. Photographers—Fiction.

  3. France—History—1914–1940—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3613.I854L37 2007

  813’.6—dc22

  2007005200

  ISBN 978-0-393-33194-3 pbk.

  ISBN 978-0-393-24789-3 (e-book)

  W. W. Norton & Company. Inc.

  500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10110

  www.wwnorton.com

  W. W. Norton & Company Ltd.,

  Castle House, 75/76 Wells Street, London W1T 3QT

 

 

 


‹ Prev