2. As its title suggests, Oyster Creek is very much a novel of place. What place or places have strongly affected you, and why?
3. Charlotte’s marriage to Henry evolves over the course of the book. At first Henry is almost a father figure, but after Fiona’s birth Charlotte becomes the stronger partner, and husband and wife drift apart. Charlotte’s love for Darryl has an intense, though unusual effect on her marriage. Do you think there are common stages of marriage, just like stages of life?
4. Henry Tradescome, glacial by nature, fears global warming above all things. Late in the book his wife finds out some things that change her understanding of his coolness. Have you known men, or women, like Henry, who keep themselves distant even from those they love most? Do you see this as a weakness or a strength?
5. Throughout Oyster Creek, the characters’ lives are shaped by history, from the changes brought about by the sinking of Billingsgate Island to the effects of the King’s Law to the ways the characters are influenced by their childhood experiences. Charlotte tries in many ways to have some good effect on the future, with only partial success. How has history affected your life? In what ways have your actions changed what may happen in the future?
6. The author suggests above that everyone has something new to say about love. What have you learned about love? How has love—romantic or familial—surprised you, changed you?
7. How do you imagine the lives in Oyster Creek will continue? What will become of the characters? What do you hope and fear for them? Are there things you wish you knew about the inhabitants of Oyster Creek and their lives?
The House on Oyster Creek Page 33