The
questions and discussion topics that follow are intended to enhance your
group's reading of Nichelle D. Tramble's THE DYING GROUND. We hope they
will provide new insights and ways of looking at this exciting new novel.
1. The Oakland of Daddy Al's youth is much different than that of his old
age; the opportunity that drew him to the west has been replaced with a
drug-fueled violence. Yet in some sense, the freedom and hope of old Oakland
still exists in the illicit world of drugs. How does the younger generation
appropriate and transform this spirit? What is the response of Daddy Al's
generation to this change?
2. Like many
places where the law ceases to have meaning, Oakland, its young in particular,
relies on an alternate, unspoken idea of morality and honor. Describe
this code of ethics. What are the rules? Do they differ between the drug
world and the larger community? What are the contradictions between these
rules and the law?
3. When Daddy
Al tells Maceo about the tragic life and death of his first wife Elizabeth,
what is he saying about his idea of justice? About its redemptive power?
Is this a warning to Maceo?
4. Maceo's
large close-knit family nurtured him from birth and provided a substitute
family for many of his friends. Despite the strength of this family relationship,
the ghost of Maceo's mother and father seem to exert an equally strong
influence on him. What is this legacy? How does it affect him? How are
Holly and Felicia affected by the mistakes of their parents?
5. Maceo's
vivid dreams haunt him throughout the book; they function as premonitions
as well as expressions of his true fears. It seems as if Maceo is wrestling
his demons in these dreams and it is here that we encounter Maceo's father
and Billy Crane. What do these dreams tell us about Maceo? About his fears?
His guilt?
6. As outsiders
and insiders to Oakland Alixe and Felicia are near opposites, yet they
represent Maceo's twin desires. "Alixe was what I wanted waiting
for me on the other side but I needed Felicia." What is Felicia's
role in Maceo's life? What is Alixe's? How does Alixe view Maceo's world?
7. Despite
the violence surrounding them, the residents of Oakland maintain a remarkable
sense of community, as witnessed in Cutty's barbershop and during Billy
Cane's funeral. Are these scenes realistic? Discuss how humor is used
and expressed in this community.
8. Maceo
and Holly view their participation in "the game" less as a choice
than as a result of their personal history. Maceo claims he was "born
in death" and both men carry the sins of their parents close to their
hearts. It is as if their parents and surroundings have created a future
in which they have little choice. Discuss this notion of fate or destiny.
Is it valid? How does it shape their decisions? Does it cause them to
disregard the consequences of their actions?
9. Scottie,
Maceo and Daddy Al represent three generations of Oakland males; both
of the men play the role of father figure - Daddy Al to Maceo and Maceo
to Scottie. How does these relationships work? Is there any disappointment
within them? What is each man teaching the younger?
10. For most
of the book we see Felicia only through the eyes of others; how does Maceo's
characterization of her differ from reality? After returning to Oakland
to avenge Billy's death Felicia's brother accuses her of following the
horrifying example of their father. Do you think this is true? How does
she arrive at her startling, heartrending solution to Billy's death? Are
her actions justified?
11. THE DYING
GROUND charts Maceo's journey from the fringes of violence to its very
center. He struggles to make this transition on his own terms, trying
to stay true to the disparate beliefs of his family and friends. Is he
successful? Does his love and allegiance for Felicia redeem him? What
does the future hold for him?
12. "From
memory my gut knew that it would all disappear one way or another and
it had, one by one.
Some of the loss was my own doing, I couldn't
argue that, but it all stemmed from the same place
drugs."
Tramble writes with a sense of ambivalence towards the Oakland drug world,
she acknowledges its devastating effects but respects its power. The character
of Alixe best reflects this view; what is her assessment of Oakland? Are
there any heroes in this story? Do we, as readers, come to understand
them?
13. "When
you will survive if you fight quickly and perish if you do not, this is
called the dying ground." -Sun Tzu. Explain Tramble's use of this
quote in her title. What does it say about Oakland and its future?
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