Dial-An-Author to
participate in your reading group!
Beginning June 3,
2003, Craig Danner will be available to participate by phone in your
reading group's discussion of Himalayan Dhaba. To sign up, send
an email to PlumeMarketing@us.penguingroup.com.
Please include the day of the week and the time your book group meets.
A Reading Group
Guide for
Himalayan Dhaba
by
Craig Joseph Danner
Introduction
Mary, a newly widowed American
doctor, travels to a remote hospital high in the Indian Himalayas to
work with a colleague of her late husband. She arrives to find this
other doctor missing, the hospital abandoned, and herself the only medical
provider within a hundred miles.
Caught between shattering loneliness
and harrowing self-doubt, she struggles to overcome daunting medical
and cultural obstacles in a yearlong odyssey of healing and redemption
that connects her with a cast of unexpected characters.
There is Amod, the waiter in the
local dhaba, who secretly adores and watches out for the doctor.
Phillip is a young and lonely British traveler who lands in the doctor's
care before he is kidnapped deep into the snowbound Himalayan interior.
Antone is the aging kidnapper whose every plan goes sour. And finally
there is Meenaabandoned by her family to serve the abusive men
of an isolated road crewwho finds the courage to guide herself
and young Phillip to their salvation. As the lives of these characters
intersect with her own, Mary learns not only to heal others, but also
to heal herself.
Himalayan Dhaba leads the
reader through the mountains of India and across the rugged terrain
of the human heart on a journey that will long be remembered.
About the Author
In the early 1990s, Craig Danner
and his wife found themselves the primary medical practitioners in a
remote and rudimentary hospital high in the Indian Himalayas. Working
without modern medicines and equipment, they struggled with language
and cultural barriers, forged deep friendships with the hospital staff,
and did their best to treat thousands of local villagers and wayward
travelers.
During that long winter in the
Himalayas, when the snows closed the passes and the hospital became
quiet for several weeks, Craig Danner began writing a novel that has
already won both critical acclaim and a Book of the Year Award from
the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association.
The author lives with his wife
on a small farm in rural Oregon. He is at work on his next novel, The
Fires of Edgarville.
Discussion Questions
1. Some would suggest it is difficult
for male authors to give an authentic voice to female characters. Are
the characters of Mary and Meena successfully drawn?
2. Does gender play an important role in Mary's journey in this novel?
How would the story have been different if Mary had been a man? If Phillip
had been a woman?
3. Descent and redemption are major themes of Himalayan Dhaba. How do
the main characters' paths differ? What does redemption look like to
Mary, Amod, Meena, and Phillip?
4. At the end of the novel, Phillip stands with his hand out to Mary,
announcing his recovery. How do you imagine his long winter with the
holy baba has changed Phillip?
5. Ravens appear throughout the novel. What, if anything, do they symbolize?
6. What was your impression of the physical setting of Himalayan
Dhaba? Do you imagine this is a beautiful or an ugly place? Would
you like to visit this area?
7. Communicationand miscommunicationis another major theme
of this novel. How is it that these characters could so dramatically
affect each others' lives, even when they could barely communicate with
each other verbally?
8. The author leaves the reader to imagine his or her ending to Antone's
story. What do you think happens to him next?
9. Violence shapes the lives of both Meena and Manu, yet both of them
respond to it with more violence. Are their responses justifiable? Did
you see alternative solutions for either of them?
10. Physical hunger is a recurrent theme in this novel. What does food
mean to Amod? To Mary? To Meena? What is food to people of the West
that it is not to the indigenous people of this novel and vice-versa?
11. Discuss the ways in which religion and faith are addressed in Himalayan
Dhaba. Some characters are motivated by Christianity, others by
Hinduism. Are their characters in the novel to whom spirituality seems
absent?
12. Much is devoted in Himalayan Dhaba to birth, but beyond that,
little is seen of parents and children interacting with each other.
What do we know of Mary's parents from the novel? Do you think their
influence, or lack thereof, in the novel played any part in the decision
she has made at the novel's end?
TOP