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Discussion Guide

Time of the Child

These book club questions are from the publisher, Bloomsbury.

Book club questions for Time of the Child by Niall Williams

Use these discussion questions to guide your next book club meeting.

The familial relationships between characters are central to this novel. How would you describe Ronnie’s relationship with her father?
In the final chapter, as Noelle is being passed from parishioner to parishioner, the whole congregation comes together to help quiet her cries. Why does this moment become famous in the town? What does this scene represent for you?
Why did the doctor wait to attend to the priest at the beginning of the story when Father Tom was struggling to remember whose birthday the church was celebrating that December? Do you think it was the right thing to do—to wait? Do you understand his hesitancy?
Why was the doctor unable to tell Annie Mooney about his feelings for her? What was it that stopped him from telling her how he felt while she was alive? Do you think she returned his feelings? Does it matter if she did or didn’t?
Many characters suffer from illness throughout the novel, from alcoholism to dementia to cancer. How do the different family members deal with their loved ones’ pain?
What does this passage mean to you? “Although invisible to Church and State, it was women who knitted the country together, and in Faha, on Sunday morning after Mass, you could see the needles.” Do you think this has changed since 1962, when the novel took place?
The night the child arrives, there is a significant change in the relationship between Doctor Troy and Ronnie. How did the child change the connection between Ronnie and her father?
Why do you think Ronnie felt she had done something wrong that first night when the child didn’t immediately take her bottle? Why did she feel that there was some “primal failure and inadequacy in her”? Have you ever felt this way when caring for someone?
Then Doctor Troy thinks, “It had to be his fault that she always found fault in herself . . . Her first instinct was always failure.” Do you agree with Doctor Troy that it’s his fault? What makes people, particularly women, default to failure in this way?
Williams writes: “It was a man dancing in a kitchen with a baby, a step, and another, an over and back that repeated and made a pattern that declared its otherness from the ordinary by the fact that human beings move towards purpose.” Can dancing have a purpose of its own? How did the passage with Doctor Troy dancing with the baby make you feel?
What do you think it meant when Aine Crowe (Doady) did not let go of Doctor Troy’s hand after he told her of his plan? Do you think she understood the doctor’s plan?
How do you think the doctor’s profession informed his personality, and similarly, how did his personality inform his profession? Do you think that Doctor Troy was a good doctor?

Time of the Child Book Club Questions PDF

Click here for a printable PDF of the Time of the Child discussion questions