Author's
Introduction -
Writing The Birth House was truly an adventure for
me. One that was fueled by tales from the past, one that led me to peel off layer
after layer of old newspaper from the walls of my attic, and ultimately, one that
taught me to ask questions
some easily answered, some left hanging in the
air.
I hope the novel leads you to some questions and conversations of
your own.
Thanks for reading. Please keep in touch. I'd love to hear from you!
Description
-
The Birth House is the story of Dora Rare, the first daughter
to be born in five generations of Rares. As a child in an isolated village in
Nova Scotia, she is drawn to Miss Babineau, an outspoken Acadian midwife with
a gift for healing. Dora become Miss B's apprentice and together they help the
women of Scots Bay through infertility, difficult labours, breech births, unwanted
pregnancies and even unfulfilling sex lives. Filled with details as compelling
as they are surprising, The Birth House is an unforgettable tale of the struggles
women have faced to have control of their own bodies and to keep the best parts
of tradition alive in the world of modern medicine.
Reading
Group Questions
1. Early in the novel, Dora's Aunt Fran quotes
from The Science of a New Life: "It is almost impossible for a woman to read
the current 'love and murder' literature of the day and have pure thoughts, and
when the reading of such literature is associated with idleness - as it almost
invariably is - a woman's thoughts and feelings cannot be other than impure and
sensual."
How does reading shape Dora's
view of the world?
How does her love of books play into her relationship with
her father? With Miss B.? With Archer?
2.
Dora makes the following observation after attending her first birth:
"How
a mother comes to love her child, her caring at all for this thing that's made
her heavy, lopsided and slow, this thing that made her wish she were dead
that's
the miracle."
What do you think she meant?
Do you feel this is
true?
3.
Folklore, home remedies, women's traditions, herbalism, and a belief in the divine
feminine are all part of Miss B.'s way of life. She is determined to pass these
things along to Dora.
Does Dora try hard
enough to preserve them?
Should she let them go?
What traditions do you
hold dear in your life (and why)?
4. According
to medical texts and advertisements of the early 1900's, women who were prone
to "emotional behaviour" were often labeled as hysterical. A poster
in Dr. Thomas's office reads:
Feeling
Anxious? Tired? Weepy?
You are not alone. The modernization of society has
brought about an increase in neurasthenia, greensickness and hysteria.
Symptoms
of Neurasthenia include: Weeping, melancholy, anxiety, irritability, depression,
outrageousness, insomnia, mental and physical weariness, idle talking, sudden
fevers, morbid fears, frequent titillation, forgetfulness, palpitations of the
heart, headaches, writing cramps, mental confusion, constant worry and fear of
impending insanity. Talk to your physician. He can help.
Do
we see this kind of questioning today?
Are women's emotions still targeted
by advertisers?
5. When Archer asks
Dora to marry him, he tells her that, "love takes care of herself."
She chooses to say 'yes'.
What does Dora's
decision say about her situation and station in life?
Should she have chosen
to follow in Miss B.'s footsteps instead?
6.
Through a visit to Dr. Thomas's office, Dora discovers that women's sexual pleasure
(specifically orgasm) is considered to be a medical function (or dysfunction).
Ads of the time, such as the one for the White Cross Vibrator, reinforced this
notion.
How does Dora come to terms with
these ideas?
What kinds of taboos surround women's sexuality today?
7.
Miss B. says this about Mabel's home birth: "The scent of a good groanin'
cake, a cuppa hot Mother's Tea and time. Most times that's all a mama needs on
the day her baby comes."
She later says this to Dr. Thomas: "Science
don't know kindness. It don't know kindness from cabbage."
Dr. Thomas
replies: "Science is neither kind nor unkind, Miss Babineau. Science is exact."
How
do these statements show the differences between Miss B. and Dr. Thomas?
In
moving the birthing experience from homes and birth houses to hospitals, what
have women lost? What have they gained?
8. After Dora discovers Aunt Fran's affair with Reverend Norton she writes:
"He's been seeing her. He's noticed her so much that now she's his."
Why
do you think she decided to keep it a secret?
Should she have told someone?
What
would you have done?
9. Dora says this
about her mother: "Everything I've learned from Mother, every bit of her
truth has been said while her hands were moving."
What does this say about her relationship with her mother?
Is this kind of
communication still an important part of women's lives?
10.
The author uses ephemera from Dora's life (invitations, news articles, sections
from The Willow Book, folk tales, advertisements, etc.) throughout the novel.
How
did this affect your reading experience?
Do you have a favourite from them?
11. There are many mentions of birthing
folklore and techniques, from groaning cake to mother's tea, from Miss B. turning
Ginny's breech baby to quilling.
What wives'
tales about pregnancy and birth do you know?
Are there any that you'd swear
by?
12. The sisters of the Occasional Knitters
Society support Dora throughout the book (keeping the secret of Wrennie's birth,
taking care of Wrennie when Dora goes to Boston, meeting together for conversations
and sisterhood.)
What makes their friendship
so strong?
Are friendships like that possible today?
13.
Dora is conflicted when Mrs. Ketch comes to her house for help. Given Dora's past
with Mrs. Ketch,
Why do you think she
chose to assist her in helping her 'lose' her baby?
14.
Maxine is very different from anyone Dora has ever met. Boston is very different
from Scots Bay.
What do Maxine and Boston
bring to Dora's life?
Have you ever made a change in location or met someone
who immediately changed your life?
15.
In both the prologue and the epilogue, we see how life has changed in Scots Bay.
Other towns in other places have changed over time, some gone forever.
Have
we gained anything with these changes?
What have we lost?
16.
After Dora and Hart become lovers, he talks of marriage and she refuses.
Why
do you think she is so determined not to marry him?
17.
In the epilogue Dora reflects on her past and what the birth house has meant to
her and to the community. There is a sense of change, but also a sense of traditions
preserved and lessons learned.
What thoughts
will you take away from The Birth House?
Tips and Tid Bits -for more reading group extras (recipes, tips, quotes, e-cards,
a hysteria quiz, signed bookplates, tealeaf readings, contests, author interviews,
FAQ's, podcasts and more) visit www.thebirthhouse.com