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At First Sight
- This novel picks up a few weeks after True
Believer left off, where we
learn that Jeremy and Lexie are engaged. By this point, Jeremy and Lexie
have known each other less than a month. How did Lexie and Jeremy know
so quickly? What role, if any, did her pregnancy play into the decision?
Do you know any couples personally who got engaged so quickly? How long
did it take you to realize that you wanted to marry your spouse? In his
biography, Nicholas says that he told Cathy that they would get married
one day, within 24 hours of meeting her. She laughed, but they've been
married since 1989. Did this factor into the author's decision to open
the novel in this manner?
- Alvin thinks Jeremy is making a mistake and feels free to tell him
so. If you were Jeremy's friend, what would you have said? Lexie is
nervous about meeting Jeremy's family, and though they were referenced
quite a bit in both True Believer and At First
Sight, they are minor
characters, in that the reader never even learns the names of Jeremy's
parents. Why did the author do this? Should the characters have been
developed further? Why or why not?
- The story largely takes place during the forty week period while Lexie
is pregnant, which always changes a relationship. Yet, during
this time, Jeremy and Lexie are still getting to know each other. How
does the pregnancy affect the development of the relationship? Are the
developments more positive or negative? At the same time, Jeremy and
Lexie are remodeling a house, and Jeremy struggles with writer's block.
It seems, to Jeremy anyway, that when it rains it pours. Describe how
these challenges affect Jeremy? How do they affect Lexie?
- Mayor Gherkin plays a lesser role in this novel than in True
Believer. The town, too, plays a lesser role. Doris, Jed, Rachel and Alvin, on
the other hand, play more prominent roles in At
First Sight. Who was
the most important of the minor characters? Who was the least important?
Why did the author choose to "switch" the prominence of the
characters in the sequel?
- Describe the symbolism of the mysterious lights in the cemetery. In
what ways does this symbolism portrayed in the relationship between
Lexie and Jeremy?
- Working late one night, Jeremy receives an e-mail that calls into
question whether the child is actually his. At first he dismisses it;
later, however, he begins to wonder how well he really knows Lexie.
Should Jeremy have told Lexie about the e-mail right away? Would he
have believed her? How might the relationship have played out differently
had Jeremy been less secretive? In what ways was Lexie secretive? Who
was more at fault when the problems in their relationship began to arise?
- After Jeremy and Lexie are married, Jeremy takes a walk on the beach,
where he spies some wild horses grazing on the dunes. This paragraph
is one of the author's favorite passages in the novel. Were there any
passages that you found particularly insightful, well-written or interesting?
- Doris tells Lexie that a happy marriage means meeting your spouse's
needs, while they do the same for you. If your spouse could meet only
one of your needs, what would it be? What would your spouse's be? (The
Ten Needs, from the book, His Needs, Her Needs, are: Communication,
Affection, Honesty, Family commitment, Financial Support, Sex, Recreational
companionship, domestic support, physical attractiveness, and admiration)
- Toward the end of the novel, just as Lexie and Jeremy are settling
into life as a married couple, new tension is suddenly added to the
relationship. How would you react had this happened in your marriage?
- This is the first of Nicholas's novels in which life after the characters
fell in love is described in detail. It's also the first novel in which
the characters were in love when the book began. In what other ways
was this novel different than the author's previous work? Can this novel
still be described as a love story? Why or why not?
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