Discussion Guide
Garden Spells
These book club questions are from the publisher, Penguin Random House.
Book club questions for Garden Spells by Sarah Addison Allen
Use these discussion questions to guide your next book club meeting.
Could you be persuaded that certain plants have powers, as Claire describes and uses them? If you believed you possessed the magical powers that Claire has inherited, how would you use them? What’s the first thing you would do?
Which of the sisters resonates with you personally? Claire believes everything–everyone–is temporary. She clings to home and makes herself content. Sydney’s philosophy is “you can’t hold on to everything,” and so has a history of very temporary, noncommittal relationships. Are their outlooks two sides of the same coin? What is the nature of the shift that occurs for each of them?
Sydney does what she feels she has to do in running with her daughter. What is your reaction to her dilemma, and her choice?
Sydney uses her birth name, Waverley, when she returns to her hometown, after hating the name all her life; she even gives her own daughter the Waverley surname. Why do you think she does this?
Do you relate to Emma’s passion for Hunter John? Is it possible for someone else to manipulate personal circumstances as Emma and her mother do?
How do you explain Claire’s attraction-repulsion to Tyler? Why do you think Claire sees violet sparks hovering around him the first time she meets him? What makes her eventually realize they are destined to be together?
Do you think a child can have the kind of insight and sensitivity that Bay demonstrates? Could a man have it? If not, why?
The four Waverley women in this novel (Claire, Sydney, Bay, Evanelle) have special gifts. Which of the four gifts would you like to have yourself? Why?
Fred observes, “You are who you are, whether you like it or not, so why not like it?” How does this statement relate to the different characters in the book?
Claire thinks, “When you tell a secret to someone, embarrassing or not, it forms a connection. That person means something to you simply by virtue of what he knows.” Do you agree with this? Can a secret be a positive thing? A negative thing?
Which character changes the most over the course of the book? What does he or she learn? What had to take place in order for this to happen?
Do you consider this to be a “southern” novel? Besides its setting, what characteristics make it so?
If you knew that biting into a Waverley apple would reveal your future… would you bite? Why or why not?
Garden Spells Book Club Questions PDF
Click here for a printable PDF of the Garden Spells discussion questions

