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The Savage Garden Reading Guide & Discussion Questions

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The Savage Garden by Mark Mills

The Savage Garden

by Mark Mills
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  • First Published:
  • May 10, 2007, 336 pages
  • Paperback:
  • May 2008, 352 pages
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For supplemental discussion material see our Beyond the Book article, Background and our BookBrowse Review of The Savage Garden.


Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!

Introduction
The summer of 1958 begins inauspiciously for art student Adam Strickland. Nearing the end of his university studies, he is dumped by his girlfriend for being “somewhere between ‘boring’ and ‘bland’” and is pressured by his father to begin a career in insurance. To make matters worse, the deadline for his thesis paper is looming, the topic of which has gone through several unpromising incarnations. On this last issue, Adam’s professor, Crispin Leonard, offers a solution: an investigation of the Renaissance-era garden at the Tuscan villa of his old friend Signora Docci. Accepting the assignment, Adam departs for Italy with little hint of what is to come, save for Professor Leonard’s cryptic warning about the elderly Signora: “Don’t underestimate her.” It is a warning that proves more prescient than even the professor could have imagined.

David Mills’ The Savage Garden is a novel rich with history, intrigue, and psychological drama. Set in an Italy still recovering from the wounds inflicted by World War II, the novel reveals the troubled history of the Docci family, seemingly cursed by the crimes of its progenitor, Federico Docci, some four centuries earlier. Although his misdeeds were never discovered, Federico’s legacy continues to haunt the modern-day Doccis, who live under the shadow of a similarly heinous act committed at the end of the war. The key to both of these secrets lies frozen in time at the Docci estate: in the memorial garden designed by Federico, unaltered in over four hundred years, and in the sealed-off third floor of the villa, where Signora Docci’s son Emilio met his violent end.

Stepping naively into this world, Adam initially approaches his work as an academic exercise. He begins by dutifully cataloguing curious inconsistencies of the garden, which was ostensibly conceived in memory of Federico’s young wife Flora. Soon, however, these inconsistencies begin to seem more like clues - an elaborate puzzle constructed around Dante’s Inferno and pointing to the true cause of Flora’s death. Signora Docci is delighted by Adam’s work, treating him as an honored guest and sharing stories of the Docci family. But her true motive is to guide Adam to unravel the one story that no one is eager to tell – what really happened on the third floor, and what role the Signora’s son Maurizio played in his brother’s death. As Adam comes closer to uncovering the truth, he attracts the attention of several people who would prefer that the past remain buried – and who are more than willing to bury Adam along with it.



Discussion Questions

  1. Explaining her fondness for the Scottish, Chiara tells Adam that “they were hill people, like the Italians. Hills had names, they had stories attached to them. Peaks and passes had been defended, battles had been fought in their valleys. You couldn’t ignore hills, they seeped into your marrow, they became part of you.” Using this passage as a starting point, discuss the significance of geography and location in the novel.

  2. The novel contains several brief chapters of unattributed dialogue between two people, whom we quickly learn are Signora Docci and Maria. How does the author use these chapters to build tension? What other narrative techniques does he employ? Are they effective?

  3. In the opening and closing passages, Adam thinks back on his life before he left for Villa Docci: “He barely recognized himself… Try as he might, he couldn’t penetrate the working of that stranger’s mind.” In what ways does Adam change through the course of the novel?

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  1. How does the author develop themes of identity and belonging throughout the narrative?
  2. What role does the setting play in shaping the characters' decisions and relationships?
  3. Discuss how the ending reframes the events of the story. Were you surprised?


Unless otherwise stated, this discussion guide is reprinted with the permission of Berkley Books. Any page references refer to a USA edition of the book, usually the trade paperback version, and may vary in other editions.

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