Felicia's Journey
by William Trevor
List Price: $12.95
Pages: Format:
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0140253602
Publisher: Penguin USA
William Trevor has long been hailed as one of the "very best writers of
our era" (The Washington Post). In both his short stories and his novels,
Trevor manages to shed light on the darkest corners of the human heart.
It is no surprise, then, that with Felicia's Journey Trevor uses his
gifts as a master storytellerspare, lyrical prose; a tightly woven
story; and finely drawn charactersto turn out this psychological
thriller.
Felicia, the unlikely heroine
of the story, is a young Irish girl from a strongly conservative Republican
family. Having lost her job at the local meat-canning factory, she is
forced to stay at home to care for her widowed father, two brothers, and
great-grandmother. Just when she begins to lose all hope of escaping the
gloom of her existence, a charming man called Johnny Lysaght returns home
from England to visit his mother. It doesn't take long for Johnny
to seduce the naive and impulsive Felicia. Nor does it take long for him
to return to England, leaving Felicia pregnant and with no forwarding
address. Once her family discovers her secret, and realizes that the baby's
father is a traitorhaving joined up with the British ArmyFelicia
is tossed out of the house and goes to England in search of her lover.
It is a quest that will prove futile. Johnny has told her that he works
in a lawnmower factory in the Midlands, but it soon becomes clear to everyone
but Felicia that he has willfully deceived her.
A combination of innocence
and faith keeps Felicia wandering, and ultimately delivers her into the
hands of Mr. Hilditch, an outwardly decent man who appears to come to
her rescue. But the more benevolent Mr. Hilditch becomes, offering Felicia
cups of tea, a meal, and a bed for the night, the more his predatory nature
reveals itself. And although the reader slowly realizes that Mr. Hilditch
is a monster, planning to add Felicia to his collection of girls in his
"Memory Lane," there is something so lonely and pathetic about him that
one can't help but feel some compassion for him.
Felicia's journey brings
heartache to those around herher father, heart-sick after denouncing
her; Johnny Lysaght, lying on the ground bleeding after being beaten by
Felicia's brothers; and even Mr. Hilditch, slipping increasingly into
insanity, finally fully aware of the horrors he has committed. In the
end, Felicia returns to the streets where she once searched for Johnny
Lysaght, alone and homeless, but liberatedfrom Johnny, from the
memory of her dead mother, from her controlling father, and, most of all,
from Mr. Hilditch's "Memory Lane."
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1. How does Trevor portray the differences between the English and the Irish landscapes? How does the Ireland Felicia leaves differ from that of De Valera's dream, the Ireland "whose fields would be joyous with the sound of industry, with the romping of sturdy children, with the laughter of comely maidens"?
2. Trevor never describes what has happened to Mr. Hilditch's girls in "Memory Lane"Sharon, Jakki, Elsie, and Gaye. What effect does this have on the story? What does this lack of information reveal about Hilditch himself?
3. What effect does the ending have? Would Felicia have been better off staying in Ireland? Why does she seem to accept her final fate so readily?
4.Both Hilditch and Felicia are haunted by memories of their mothers. How are both mothers portrayed in the novel? How is each character controlled by these memories?
5. What is the significance of music in the novel? What does the music Hilditch listens to reveal about him?
6. What does Hilditch's final visit to the Spa foreshadow? What does the Spa represent?
7. What ultimately allows Felicia to escape Hilditch's house?
8. What impression of Johnny Lysaght do we have? How does Trevor portray him?
9. Is Felicia truly an innocent at the end of the novel, or has she gained a deeper understanding of the hand that fate has dealt her?
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