Teacher Guide for Lara M. Zeises’s
Bringing Up the Bones
About the book:
About this guide:
This guide includes discussion questions and projects intended to extend the use of the novel into classrooms, book clubs, and literature circles. It should promote discussion on the themes of the novel including friendship, loss, depression, grief and hope.
As a class, brainstorm the qualities that make a person best friend material. How are these qualities different than a typical acquaintance?
How would you feel if your best friend had to move away? What would you do the night before your best friend left? How could the friendship be maintained?
What do you think the title means?
Comprehension Check:
4. Describe “the hole” and “the cave.”
5. What object did Benji give to Bridget before he left for college? What is the significance of this gift?
6. Compare and contrast Mrs. Gilbert to Katharine. In what ways does Mrs. Gilbert treat Bridget as a daughter?
7. Summarize the scene in Battery Park.
10. Name the Gilbert family members. How does Bridget describe each person?
Discussion Guide:
3. On page 120, Jasper says to Bridget, “You’re so strong. Your bones are so small, so fragile, but you’re so damn strong. What’s your secret?” What do you think he meant by this statement? Does it allude to the title? How?
4. Bridget clearly suffers from depression throughout the course of the book. In the beginning of Chapter 2, she provides a list of how her life has changed as a result of Benji’s death. Which of these are clues to her mental state? Can you list major symptoms of depression in teens? How can you help someone (or yourself) if you suspect they might be depressed?
5. “The girl in the mirror is a stranger to me” (p.22) Why does Bridget feel this way about herself? Have you ever had a similar experience? When? How does this disconnection happen? How can it be prevented?
6. How does the sexual choices of Bridget offer a window into her state of mind and recovery? How do her actions and choices change over the course of the novel? What does Bridget mean when she tells Jasper, “If it was about sex, it wouldn’t have to be you” (p. 96)
7. In order to explain why he likes the blues, Jasper says, “Something about the way it creeps inside you, makes your bones itch” (p. 51) What does he mean by this? Does music play a significant role in your own life? Does it make your “bones itch?” Do you think that music means more to teen than it does adults? Why?
8. What present does Fitzi deliver to Bridget from Katharine? What does Bridget mean when she says, “Sometimes Katharine means well, but she never quite hits the mark”?”(p. 70) How can well intentioned friends still disappoint each other? Is it more important to consider the intention of the friend than the act or gift? Or, do both matter? Why?
9. What is your opinion on Benji’s break-up letter to Bridget? How would you answer Bridget’s questions, “Which was more real? The tender postcoital declaration or the carefully scripted dispatch, the one he professed to have written and rewritten on three separate occasions? …And then there’s this: Does it even matter now?”
10. Compare and contrast Bridget’s relationship with Fitzi to her relationship with Katharine, using examples from the text. Do these relationships surprise you? How? Are they typical? Which relationship would you prefer to be in? Why?
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Projects across the curriculum:
Language Arts:
Vocabulary
Use each of the following words in a sentence that shows you understand the meaning. Do not just copy the one from the book!
veneer (p.6)
plausible (p. 15)
frenetic (p. 22)
petulantly (p.32)
masochistic (p.34)
perverse (p. 38)
extricate (p. 57)
reproached (p. 65)
agnostic (p.81)
obtrusive (p. 84)
undulating (p. 85)
galvanized (p. 92)
proclivity (p. 106)
surreptitious (p. 122)
sequestered (p. 147)
innocuous (p. 159)
imminent (p. 161)
paucity (p. 173)
sordid (p. 179)
fervently (p. 193)
sequestered (p. 196)
Bridget explains her need of writing occasional letters to Benji. On page 31, she states “If I can’t tell him what I’m feeling, then I’m not feeling anything at all.” Write your own letter to anyone, living or deceased, and tell them how you are feeling today.
Math:
Research the statistics regarding the number of car accidents per year in the United States. Find the top five causes of car accidents (i.e., weather conditions, heart attack while driving, etc.), and make a pie chart or bar graph to display the results.
Art:
Draw a picture of how you think Bridget looks in the beginning of the novel, and then draw a picture of how you think she looks at the end of the novel. Consider her clothing, hair color, facial expressions, and posture. You may even provide the background of her room for greater effect.
Drama:
In groups of four to five people, have each person choose a different character from Bringing Up the Bones to portray. Ask them to consider how their character sits, stands, talks, etc. Then, acting as their characters, have the students complete the following sentences:
“I love _______.”
“I hate _______.”
“I am proud of _______.”
“I fear ________.”
Afterwards, ask each student to explain why they chose their answers. You may also ask them to support their action choices for their character.
Music:
In small groups, discuss the different emotional stages that Bridget experiences during the course of the book. Choose a different song for each stage, and explain why you chose them. Consider the genre of music, the rhythm and mood of the song, and the lyrics.
Debate:
Divide the class into two large groups. Have each half take opposite standpoints in debate of the following question: “Do today’s teens act more or less maturely than the generation of their parents with the issue of sex?” Challenge each side to support their arguments with direct citations from the book.
Prepared by Francesca LaPenta
edited by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer
Copyright © 2004 Francesca LaPenta
For Classroom Use Only