Tuesday, April 20, 2010

The Help by Kathryn Stockett


In The Help Kathryn Stockett has captured, in perfect voices, the life and awakening conscience of a young white girl growing up on a plantation, as well as the voices of two black women, domestics working for white women. Some of us remember growing up in the South during the turmoil of the 1960's. We remember the tension, the "separate but equal," and the expectations for women which were very different for men.

Miss Skeeter, the young white girl, quietly and secretly asks Aibeleen, a black lady, the question, "Do you ever want to change things?" Is change possible? When black young men are brutally beaten for mistakenly using a "white" bathroom; when there are separate schools, separate hospitals, and an underlying belief that "we are different from them?" What is the cost of change?

Join the Casady Community of Readers as we discuss this riveting book during the final book club discussion on Thursday, May 6, at 8:15 in the Cochran Library.

Some questions we will consider are:

1. Who was your favorite character? Why?

2. How much of a person's character would you say is shaped by the times in which they live?

3. Do you think that had Aibileen stayed working for Miss Elizabeth, that Mae Mobley would have grown up to be racist like her mother? Do you think racism is inherent, or taught?

4. Do you think there are still vestiges of racism in relationships where people of color work for people who are white?

Other questions posted by the publisher are:

  • What do you think motivated Hilly? On the one hand she is terribly cruel to Aibileen and her own help, as well as to Skeeter once she realizes that she can't control her. Yet she's a wonderful mother. Do you think that one can be a good mother but, at the same time, a deeply flawed person?
  • Like Hilly, Skeeter's mother is a prime example of someone deeply flawed yet somewhat sympathetic. She seems to care for Skeeter--and she also seems to have very real feelings for Constantine. Yet the ultimatum she gives to Constantine is untenable; and most of her interaction with Skeeter is critical. Do you think Skeeter's mother is a sympathetic or unsympathetic character? Why?
  • Did it bother you that Skeeter is willing to overlook so many of Stuart's faults so that she can get married, and that it's not until he literally gets up and walks away that the engagement falls apart?
  • Do you believe that Minny was justified in her distrust of white people?
  • From the perspective of a twenty-first century reader, the hairshellac system that Skeeter undergoes seems ludicrous. Yet women still alter their looks in rather peculiar ways as the definition of "beauty" changes with the times. Looking back on your past, what's the most ridiculous beauty regimen you ever underwent?
  • The author manages to paint Aibileen with a quiet grace and an aura of wisdom about her. How do you think she does this?
  • What did you think about Minny's pie for Miss Hilly? Would you have gone as far as Minny did for revenge?