Sugar by Bernice McFadden
By APOOO • Jun 13th, 2008 • Category: Discussion Guide •
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Sugar by Bernice McFadden BUY IT NOW
1. Sugar opens with the murder of Jude Taylor. Why do you think the author chose to open with this graphicand horrificscene? How did this scene set the tone for the rest of the novel? Why is Jude’s murder such an integral part of the storyline?
2. When Pearl first sees Sugar, she is “struck by the familiarity of her face”(pg. 37) because it reminds her of Jude. Pearl also called Sugar by Jude’s name on several occasions. What draws Pearl to Sugar besides her physical resemblance to Jude?
3. By associating with Sugar, Pearl alienates Shirley and some of the other women in Bigelow. Why do these women feel so threatened by Sugar?
4. Sugar and Pearl’s friendship is an unlikely pairing. What does each one gain from the relationship?
5. At one point in the story the author writes, “Knowing each other’s past helped both Pearl and Sugar. Secret pains, now told, bonded the women together tighter than anything else in this world” (pg. 125). Why do Pearl and Sugar choose to confide in one other when neither has ever done so with anyone else?
6. In the beginning of the book, the author has included this quote by Sarah Miles: “There’s a little bit of hooker in every woman. A little bit of hooker and a little bit of God.” What do you think of this statement? How does it pertain to the story?
7. Sugar is set mainly in the small town of Bigelow, Arkansas. What “role” does the small town play in the story? Sugar was raised in a small town by the Lacey sisters and later lived in St. Louis, Detroit, and Chicago. Why does she choose to return to a small town?
8. Describe Pearl and Joe’s relationship. What first drew them to one another? How would you describe their relationship when the story first begins? How does it change as the novel progresses? At the end of the story, the reader finds out that Joe is going to make a confession to Pearl. How do you think she would have reacted to the news?
9. “Pearl looked around her. She tried to imagine herself without Sugar. She didn’t know who that might be, the person that existed before Sugar’s arrival was buried deep into the hard, dry memory of Bigelow next to the rotting bones of her baby girl. How could she be anything more with the loss of two in her life now?” (pg. 218). Why does Pearl feel so bereft by Sugar’s departure? Do you think she sensed that Sugar was more than just a neighbor and friend to her and Joe?
10. One reviewer stated that “Sugar speaks of what is real.” What aspects of the novel do you think the reviewer is referring to?
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I am very disappointed with the ending of such an explosive and interesting story. No real secrets were exposed. No one had any resolve or closing over their sorrows. No happy ended or at least one that made sense. It’s as if Ms. McFadden heard the door bell ringing and just stopped writing. Why counldn’t Sugar have stood before the church and told them who her grandmother and mother was so that her connection to her biggest basher, Ms. Shirley, being her great-grandmother have be revealed? And the fact that John had an affair with her mother before he married Pearl? And the fact that Lappy confessed to the violent, brutal murder of Jude? Why not let their be closure for Pearl and a new life right there for Sugar as a singer and family member of the townspeople? God! This book really left me hanging with such selfishness.