1. General Impressions
Gather initial thoughts and broad opinions about the book.
- In light of the novel’s title, were you surprised that the majority of Long Island takes place in Ireland? What was your original response to this disparity?
- How did you respond to the novel’s inciting event: that Tony Fiorello is having a child with another woman? What emotions did this revelation elicit for you as a reader, and why?
- How did your experience reading Long Island compare to your experience reading Coim Tóibín’s other novels? Alternatively, how does Long Island compare to other Irish authors’ work (for example: Claire Keegan, Donal Ryan, and Paul Lynch)?
2. Personal Reflection and Connection
Encourage readers to connect the book’s themes and characters with their personal experiences.
- Eilis Fiorello immediately refuses to be a part of Tony’s new child’s life. How did you react to how she handles this issue? Would you have taken a different approach?
- Eilis, Jim Farell, and Nancy Sheridan are all caught in internal conflicts. Whose personal circumstances did you find most relatable or believable, and why?
- On Long Island and in Enniscorthy, Eilis is involved in small communities. How do you think you would handle each of these spaces? Do you think Eilis navigates them well?
- Eilis, Jim, and Nancy are all asking questions about their futures.