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1. As it turns out, neither Cait nor Julian has perfectly correct information about the other when they make their decisions. At each step of their relationship, do their actions (or inactions) make sense to you?
2. Is Julian a stalker? A romantic? Is this a love story?
3. What role does music play for the characters in The Song Is You? How and why does music “reopen” Julian’s world? Does it “pay him back”? What does the narrator mean by a “mutual possession”?
4. What do Billie Holiday and the recording of “I Cover the Waterfront” symbolize for Julian’s father? For Julian?
5. Alec’s gallery uses a cocktail napkin that reads: “following the act of love, all creatures grieve.” Rachel resents Julian’s “retreat from feeling,” his fading out to “present less and less of himself to hold on to.” How does Rachel grieve? What realizations do Julian and Rachel reach on their own? Together? How are grief and memory intertwined?
6. “You have to reclaim yourself somehow, or you’ll walk forever like this: among the living but not one of them. Nobody will touch you.” How does this advice relate to Julian’s role as muse to Cait? Why does he consider being her muse “plenty, for now”?
7. Describe the significance of how Julian and Rachel met with regard to what we know about their relationship and Julian’s eventual relationship with Cait.
8. How does technology both promote and hinder connection in the novel?
9. Discuss how aspects of music—art, talent, fame, nostalgia, feeling— can simultaneously inspire both self-love and self-loathing for characters in The Song Is You. How does the struggle for permanence relate? Courage? Longing?
10. On the subject of singers, Julian suspects that “the only real ones, the pure ones, were the dead ones.” More broadly, how does this statement ring true in Julian’s life? Cait’s? Rachel’s? Do you agree?
11. Discuss the significance of space and silence in The Song Is You: between characters, in songs, onstage, and even “the gap between the man and the music.”
12. How and why does Julian reach the conclusion that Cait is the “necessary catalyst” to making Carlton “a present joy in his life” rather than a “semisweet torture from his past or a future stolen from him”?
13. Explain the significance of the Japanese sleeper stories Julian’s father told him as a young boy in relation to the novel. Do you agree with Julian’s father’s conclusion that “love is not sufficient. It never has been”? Does Julian? How do Julian’s and Aidan’s reactions to their father’s stories reflect their differing relationships with him?
14. Why does Aidan delete Cait’s voice mail from Julian’s answering machine? Do you agree that this is “best for everyone”?
15. In Budapest, Julian insists that “a perfect solution, a perfect ending and a perfect beginning” existed. Why is a “factual soft focus” required in Julian’s “perfect” world? Given this, how do you interpret the end of the novel? Is it a “perfect ending”?
Anonymous
Posted April 26, 2010
Out of 7 people: 1 person loved it!; 4 people could not get through the book; 1 rushed to finish it for the discussion but did not like it; 1 person read it, felt ambivalent it--but liked it better after the discussion! I RARELY don't finish a book, but I found this book too verbose--quite pretentious--and the plot and characters very disjointed, though unique. Unfortunately, the whole experience in trying to get through the book and not succeeding left me with the recommendation: don't waste your time! Harsh, I know...
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted May 26, 2009
"The Song Is You" is more style than substance, and that's not a bad thing. The plot is less substantial than the multifaceted characters, who are both attractive and exasperating (pretty hard to pull off that combination; they're likable in spite of themselves); but it's the author's writing style that is the main reason to read this book. His playful and sophisticated use of language made me laugh out loud at several points, and he is able to just "nail" situations with an insightful wry humor. I work in the music industry and know many people who are just as passionate about music - and just as promiscuous in their listening - as the protagonist, so his character rang quite true for me. The plots twists and turns lead to a very satisfying, true-to-life, conclusion.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.ElizabethNY
Posted August 20, 2009
I Also Recommend:
Great book, I really related to Julian and the love for his IPOD, but I felt there were some holes towards the end I would have liked explained.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted August 4, 2009
This book is absolutely superb. If not, perhaps, for the story itself but for the way in which it is told. Mr. Phillips' use of music not just as a minor part of the story but a sort of character in its own right was a little startling for me. The way that he describes music and its role in the life of Julian spoke to me on a very personal level.
Beautiful language, lovely ideas, wonderful voice.
Anonymous
Posted June 20, 2009
An interesting and refreshingly different read. The main character - Julian - is well defined and complicated. Other characters are only partially developed, but add to the depth of Julian.
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Overview
BONUS: This edition contains a The Song Is You discussion guide and excerpts from Arthur Phillips's The Tragedy of Arthur, Prague, The Egyptologist, and Angelica.Each song on Julian’s iPod, “that greatest of all human inventions,” is a touchstone. There are songs for the girls from when he was single, there’s the one for the day he met his wife-to-be, there’s one for the day his son was born. But when Julian’s family falls apart, even music loses its hold on him.
Until one snowy night in Brooklyn, when his life’s soundtrack—and life itself—start to play ...