Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister by Gregory Maguire

Tale of Cinderella. Really well written. It makes Cinderella more real, it includes the fantasy aspect in the imagination of children and as an exaggerated story. When Cinderella is accused of leaving she uses the fantasy story we are familiar with kinda like saying, "Yeah right". I also really liked the Study Questions at the end of the book. I'm going to include them so you have an idea of what the book is about, or at least what the author wanted to get across in the book. It is not for just any child, it hints at things in our childhood that can harm and affect our future.  I'll answer some of the questions I liked best.

1. While versions of the Cinderella story go back at least a thousand years, most Americans are familiar with the tale of the glass slippers, the pumpkin coach, and the fairy godmother. In what ways does "Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister" contain the magical echo of this tale, and in what ways does it embrace the traditions of a straight historical novel?

2. Confessions is, in part, about the difficulty and the value of seeing--seeing paintings, seeing beauty, seeing the truth. Each character in Confessions has blinkers or blinders on about one thing or another. What do the characters overlook, in themselves and in one another?
 Sometimes we notice the negative in ourselves and then define ourselves by that.  One of the stepsisters defines herself because people call her ugly, but there is a time when Clara tells her she isn't ugly, she's just plain.  But she has many other talents and things about her.  So she isn't ugly, she just doesn't have any striking features, that is a big difference to me.

3. Discuss the role of artistic representation in Confessions. Consider the two portraits the Master paints. What do they say about each other, and about art? What does the Master purport to want to capture in his paintings, and why?

4. Gregory Maguire posits four types of beauty in the novel: that of physical human grace and perfection, that of flower blossoms, that of art, and that of the gesture of charity. Is it possible to make a statement about the relative values of beauty? How is each type of beauty represented in the story?

5. Is Clara's extreme beauty really an affliction, as Iris suggests, making her just another addition to the Gallery of God's Mistakes? Do you think her beauty is a curse or a blessing?
      Clara's beauty I do think is a curse.  It was one of the causes for a childhood trauma for her and in the story makes it so people notice her beauty but don't really notice anything else in her personality.  She IS her beauty to everyone and doesn't even have a chance to define herself any other way.

6. Iris is possessed by visions of imps and hobgoblins--her imagination transforms a crone into the Queen of the Hairy-Chinned Gypsies, a windmill into a ferocious giant, and smoke on the horizon into a dragon's breath. Why do you think she sees the world this way? Ultimately, is there an imp in the van den Meer house?

7. The early seventeenth century was a time in which the Dutch, it is said, invented the idea of the "comfortable home." How does the van den Meer home reflect the family within? What elements in Confessions rely on the need to keep up appearances?

8. How does the story of van den Meer's rising and falling fortunes in the tulip market relate to Clara's tale? What lessons does it offer us today?

9. Clara is preoccupied with the idea that she may be a changeling. Why does she think, even hope, that she is one? In the end, how might we redefine the term "changeling" with Clara in mind?
     Clara hopes she is a changeling, because it was an easy way to explain away something terrible that happened to her as a child.  If she IS a changeling, then she doesn't have to accept the reality of what happened to her as a child.

10. In considering Marie de Medici's scheme to marry off her godson, Margarethe professes an admiration for the Dowager Queen, saying, "Why shouldn't she arrange the world to suit herself? Wouldn't we all, if we could?" (page 243). Discuss the ways that Margarethe arranges the world to suit herself. What does her favorite saying, "Give me room to cast my eel spear, and let follow what may," tell us about her?

11. When Iris asks the crone about casting a magic spell on someone, the crone replies, "It's your own job to change yourself" (page 164). Transformation is one of the main themes of "Cinderella," and of Confessions. Discuss the ways in which the characters are transformed or transform themselves over the course of the novel. What's the value and/or the cost of transformation for each?

12. On page 65, Margarethe tells Iris, "women must collaborate or perish." Does Margarethe really believe this statement? In what ways do women collaborate or fail to collaborate in the story?

13. The novel begins and ends with the issue of charity--Margarethe's request for charity in a strange town and Clara's act of charity toward her stepmother and stepsisters. Discuss how these scenes frame the story. At the ball, the Master says, "perhaps charity is the kind of beauty that we comprehend the best because we miss it the most" (page 313). What does this mean to you?

14. How has the book changed your conception of the Cinderella story? The notion of "happily ever after"?