Discussion Guide
The Crossroads Café
1. If you could be any beautiful woman in the
world, who would you be? Why?
2. Do you feel that your looks--good, bad or
ordinary--have played a major part in shaping your life? How?
3. Our obsession with physical beauty is a
focus of the book. Do you feel that society places unfair
expectations on women in regard to their personal appearance?
4. Even in today's supposedly enlightened
world, are women still judged primarily on their youthfulness and looks?
5. Does it concern you when notable women in
business, academics and politics are critiqued for their appearance?
Do you feel that men receive similar critiques in public?
6. Is it still true that "Men get character
lines but women get wrinkles?"
7. Do you feel that beautiful celebrities,
like the book's Cathryn Deen, represent unrealistic and even destructive
ideals for physical appearance?
8. Studies indicate that men enjoy looking at
pretty young women more than women enjoy looking at pretty young men.
In other words, that men rank physical appearance higher than women do.
Do you agree?
9. Food--and all it represents in terms of
family, comfort and heritage--plays a thematic role in The Crossroads
Café. What part does food play in your own family memories and
reunions?
10. Thomas Mitternich is consumed with grief
for his wife and son even four years after their deaths. At what
point do you think grief becomes self-destructive?
11. Thomas's ability to see past Cathryn's
scars is one of his most endearing traits. Despite Hollywood
images of beauty and perfection, many people in "real life" lead happy,
fulfilling love lives regardless of severe physical imperfections.
Discuss true anecdotes from your own circle of family and friends.
12. Have you ever made--or seen others
make--negative assumptions about strangers who are physically
unattractive? Studies show that pretty people are assumed to be
smarter, more successful and more likable.
Add to Shopping Cart
Back
to top
|