Shining Sea by Anne Korkeakivi in paperback

Reading Group Guide

I’m happy to speak with book groups – whether in person, via Skype, or by e-mail – as is possible. Please feel welcome to use the contact form, under “Author,” on this website to reach me.

Please keep in mind that the below are only suggestions. It’s your group and your reading experience: discuss what you like! Still, following are a few ideas.

Some questions to consider:

1. What does the title SHINING SEA mean to you?

2. How does Michael’s legacy as a WWII veteran, former POW, and ultimately war hero affect his family? Have members of your own family served or had a first-hand experience of war? If so, how may it have influenced your or your family members’ worldviews?

3. On pages 9 and 10, Barbara describes her brother’s WWII experience and Michael “understands right away that this is how she survives, that this is the way she has chosen to navigate this world. That she is a girl who will fight to the end, fight to remain cheerful no matter what life throws at her.” Much later, on page 244, Barbara says of herself: “She’s been lucky, really.” Do you consider Barbara to be a lucky person? Is positive thinking useful or an act of denial? Is it possible for it to be both?

4. Francis finds his exceptional good looks a burden. Do you think his being a man makes his attractiveness more or less of a burden than were he a woman? Does his gender affect your response to how he comes to use his beauty?

5.  On page 43, Francis remembers his father saying about his old army canteen, “Sometimes it’s the littlest things, boys.” Which does Michael believe saved him as a prisoner of war in the Pacific: having the canteen or sharing it? Does the same idea play out elsewhere in SHINING SEA? In life?

6. Why does Eugene do what he does halfway into SHINING SEA? Do you believe Francis is implicated? What responsibilities do we have towards our friends, and does being the recipient of good fortune carry additional responsibilities?

7. On page 41, discussing the Watts Riots, Patty Ann says, “We’re starting a world war over in Vietnam. Why not set our own backyard on fire?” What do you think she means by this? Now, a half-century later, does this seem like a uniquely 1960s frame of mind, or is the same idea still kicking around in any form?

8. What do you think of Patty Ann and her life choices?

9. Michael Gannon is called a hero for saving the lives of fellow POWs. But “hero” can have diverse definitions–for example, on page 143, Francis says about the Vietnam War: “…in the US, where some people consider conscientious objectors to have been traitors and others consider them to be heroes.” What makes someone a “hero,” in your eyes? Could any of the other characters also be considered a hero? Whom in real life would you call a hero? Why?

10. Nature plays a pivotal role in the section of the novel set in Scotland, much of which takes place at sea. But that’s not the only section where nature influences the action or story. If you think back through all the other places in SHINING SEA where nature appears, does the frequency surprise you? Are we always conscious of the role of nature in our lives and modern world?

11. Towards the end of the novel, the question arises as to whether two of the characters have had a “real” marriage. Do you think they have? What do you think constitutes a “real” marriage? Is this something that might change in different periods of history?

12. On page 242, Barbara says, “The thing about life is it is so damned confusing. Such a web, each piece of it dependent on something else, something that can be as tiny as a smile from a stranger or as huge as heart disease. The good all tangled up with the bad.” Do you agree? Can you see instances in the world or your own life where good things depend upon bad things happening and vice-versa? Is it worth the bad to get to the good?

13. Which character in SHINING SEA, if any, do you most relate to and why?

14. The generation that came of age during the 1960s challenged the norms of their parents’ generation, most overtly through hippy culture. Is this something specific to that era, or is it a cycle that repeats itself? Discuss.

15. The Gannons describe themselves as “an American family.” Is their path particularly American? What does it mean to be an American family?