The Enchantment of Lily Dahl

Lily Dahl, the young heroine of Siri Hustvedt's riveting novel, The Enchantment of Lily Dahl, is a strong, beautiful and daring nineteen year old girl poised on the brink of womanhood. In the small town of Webster, Minnesota, Lily's life revolves around the Ideal Café. She lives above the café in a rented room and works there as a waitress. This is the stage Hustvedt sets for a bizarre cast of characters who frequent the café and populate Lily's life.

Weaving a fascinating spell of mystery and suspense, Hustvedt recounts the erotic adventures, unexpected friendships, and inexplicable acts of madness that usher Lily into womanhood. By skillfully mixing reality and dreams, fact and fiction, past and present, Hustvedt creates a powerful world not quite real, but altogether truthful.

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The Enchantment of Lily Dahl

Lily Dahl, the young heroine of Siri Hustvedt's riveting novel, The Enchantment of Lily Dahl, is a strong, beautiful and daring nineteen year old girl poised on the brink of womanhood. In the small town of Webster, Minnesota, Lily's life revolves around the Ideal Café. She lives above the café in a rented room and works there as a waitress. This is the stage Hustvedt sets for a bizarre cast of characters who frequent the café and populate Lily's life.

Weaving a fascinating spell of mystery and suspense, Hustvedt recounts the erotic adventures, unexpected friendships, and inexplicable acts of madness that usher Lily into womanhood. By skillfully mixing reality and dreams, fact and fiction, past and present, Hustvedt creates a powerful world not quite real, but altogether truthful.

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The Enchantment of Lily Dahl

The Enchantment of Lily Dahl

by Siri Hustvedt
The Enchantment of Lily Dahl

The Enchantment of Lily Dahl

by Siri Hustvedt

eBook

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Overview

Lily Dahl, the young heroine of Siri Hustvedt's riveting novel, The Enchantment of Lily Dahl, is a strong, beautiful and daring nineteen year old girl poised on the brink of womanhood. In the small town of Webster, Minnesota, Lily's life revolves around the Ideal Café. She lives above the café in a rented room and works there as a waitress. This is the stage Hustvedt sets for a bizarre cast of characters who frequent the café and populate Lily's life.

Weaving a fascinating spell of mystery and suspense, Hustvedt recounts the erotic adventures, unexpected friendships, and inexplicable acts of madness that usher Lily into womanhood. By skillfully mixing reality and dreams, fact and fiction, past and present, Hustvedt creates a powerful world not quite real, but altogether truthful.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781466848016
Publisher: Holt, Henry & Company, Inc.
Publication date: 09/04/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 287
File size: 477 KB

About the Author

About The Author
Siri Hustvedt lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and child. She is the author of the novel, The Blindfold, and a collection of poems, Reading to You, among other books.

Hometown:

New York, New York

Date of Birth:

February 19, 1955

Place of Birth:

Northfield, Minnesota

Education:

B.A. in history, St. Olaf College; Ph.D. in English, Columbia University

Reading Group Guide

Reading Group Guide Questions
1. Hustvedt makes great use of Shakespeare's play, A Midsummer Night's Dream, referring both to its lines as well as its themes. How does this play relate to the unfolding story of Lily Dahl? Does it have a double meaning within the story?
2. Spying and voyeurism both have a presence in The Enchantment of Lily Dahl. In the beginning of the novel, Lily spies on Ed from her window. Mabel spies on the dark, shadowy character who lurks outside the Stuart Hotel, himself spying, and Martin's later voyeurism becomes obsessive. Why are the various characters driven to spy? Does Hustvedt make a connection between voyeurism and modern society?
3. Lily Dahl steals a pair of white shoes from the Bodler farm. "She liked the curve of their stacked heels and the softness of the leather" (p. 30). Many things happen to these shoes during the course of the story. They prompt Lily to undress in front of her window for Ed Shapiro. When she feels guilty for having stolen them, she tries to return them to the Bodler farm, but finds that she cannot. When she throws them into a fire to burn them, she ends up retrieving them only to hide them under her bed.
What do the shoes mean to Lily? What do Lily's actions regarding the stealing, wearing, and returning of the shoes indicate about her character? Why is it so important to her to return them? What does she hope to bury when she finally wraps the shoes in white cotton fabric and buries them near the Bodler farm?
4. Discuss the eroticism in The Enchantment of Lily Dahl. For example, Mabel has a very erotic drawing of Japanese lovers that Lily notices. Inspired by the stolen shoes, Lily strips in front of her uncurtained window for Ed. What are some other examples of eroticism? What role does it play in the novel?
5. Lily says that she is attached to the small town of Webster, even though she feels she might one day escape it. "I feel close to this place," Lily says. "It must be in my bones" (p. 93). What does she mean by this? How is Lily a part of this community? In what ways does she finally stand apart from it? How does Hustvedt use the small town of Webster to contribute to the novel's blurring of illusion and reality?
6. Ed is a stranger in the town of Webster. Discuss his "otherness" in terms of the various characters'
perceptions of him. What effect does his presence have on the events that unfold?
7. Who are the Bodler twins, and what do they represent? How is the secret of their mother's death important to The Enchantment of Lily Dahl?
8. One of the most striking images in the novel is that of Martin Petersen crossing the river in a fairy costume, carrying a doll in his arms. Explain the symbolism of the elements of this image: the doll,
Martin's costume. What, in his performance, is he acting out or reenacting? How does this experience forever change the way Lily views the world?
9. The idea of what is real and what is illusion permeates the novel, particularly through the character of Martin Petersen. He says to Lily, "I'm looking for the way in, I want to find an opening. Do you ever feel that nothing's real?...it's like there is a skin over everything" (p. 64). How does Martin serve to represent this world between reality and illusion? Once he's drawn Lily into this world, what distinctions, if any, does she make about reality and illusion?
10. Ed paints the portraits of various disreputable characters in Webster. What is he interested in capturing or uncovering in his paintings of them? What do his subjects have in common? It is said that there is something "aggressive" in his paintings, and that he is painting privacy itself. What does this mean?
11. How is Lily transformed by the bizarre events into which she is drawn? What about Lily's character leads her to become involved with the strange people and situations that she encounters?
What changes do the other characters experience? How are these characters different at the end of the novel?

12.What is the enchantment of Lily Dahl?

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