Skip to content menu Skip to content Skip to search Skip to sign in
Borders Book Club
Book Club Show Book Club Selections Reading Guides Starting a Book Club Book Club Recipes
       

reading guides

Loving Frank
Reserve
Loving Frank
by Nancy Horan

In this substantial debut novel, Nancy Horan elaborates on an aspect of Frank Lloyd Wright's life that is little-known to devotees of his architecture and scarcely explored by his biographers. Wright, in 1909, left his family to travel to Europe with his soulmate, Mamah Borthwick Cheney, herself a wife and mother. In portraying their passionate and scandalous relationship, Horan fashions a vivid picture of social conventions and gender roles in early 20th-century America—and of those who dared defy them.

 

Discussion Questions

  1. Do you think that Mamah is right to leave her husband and children in order to pursue her personal growth and the relationship with Frank Lloyd Wright? Is she being selfish to put her own happiness and fulfillment first?
  2. Why do you think the author, Nancy Horan, gave her novel the title Loving Frank? Does this title work against the feminist message of the novel? Is there a feminist message?
  3. Do you think that a woman today who made the choices that Mamah makes would receive a more sympathetic or understanding hearing from the media and the general public?
  4. If Mamah were alive today, would she be satisfied with the progress women have achieved or would she believe there was still a long way to go?
  5. In Sonnet 116, Shakespeare writes, "Let me not to the marriage of true minds/Admit impediments. Love is not love/That alters where it alteration finds...." How does the relationship of Mamah and Frank bear out the sentiments of Shakespeare's sonnet? What other famous love matches fill the bill?
  6. Is Mamah's story relevant to the women of today?
  7. Is Frank Lloyd Wright an admirable figure in this novel? Would it change your opinion of him to know that he married twice more in his life?
  8. What about Edwin Cheney, Mamah's husband? Did he behave as you might have expected after learning of the affair between his wife and Wright?
  9. Edwin's philosophy of life and love might be summed up in the following words from the novel: "Tell her happiness is just practice. If she acted happy, she would be happy." Do you agree or disagree with this philosophy?
  10. Carved over Wright's fireplace in his Oak Park home are the words "Life is Truth." What do you think these words mean, and do Frank and Mamah live up to them?
  11. Why do you think Horan chose to give her novel the epigraph from Goethe, "One lives but once in the world."?
  12. When Mamah confesses her affair to her friend Mattie, Mattie demands, "What about duty? What about honor?" Discuss some of the different meanings that characters in the novel attach to these two words.

 

Borders logo