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Classroom/Book
Club
Discussion Guide
Warning: Contains Plot Spoilers!
Geography Club
By Brent Hartinger
(for ages 12 and up)
Synopsis
Russel Middlebrook is convinced he's the only gay kid at Robert L.
Goodkind
High School. Then his online gay-chat buddy turns out to be none other
than
Kevin, the popular but closeted star of the school's baseball team.
Soon
Russel meets other gay students too. There’s his best friend, Min, who
reveals
she‘s bisexual; Min’s soccer-playing girlfriend, Terese; and Terese’s
politically
active friend, Ike.
But how can kids this diverse get together without drawing attention to
themselves?
"We just choose a club that's so boring nobody in their right mind
would
ever in a million years join it. We could call in the Geography Club!"
Geography Club is for anyone, gay or straight, who's ever felt like an
outsider--a
fast-paced and funny tale of teenagers who may not learn any actual
geography
in their latest club, but who discover plenty about the treacherous
social
terrain of high school, and the even more dangerous landscape of the
human
heart.
Major Themes and Ideas
(1) Bullying can come in many forms, and can even exist between
friends.
(2) Superficial differences sometimes mask underlying
similarities;
people are not always what they appear.
(3) Peer support counters peer pressure.
(4) Forgiveness is an essential part of friendship.
(5) Being a fully mature, ethical person sometimes means putting
the
concerns of other people ahead of oneself.
Discussion Questions
(1) At the beginning of the book, Russel feels different from
everyone
else in his school. Is he really that different? Is what ways is he the
same?
Some critics have called Russel an “everyboy” and a “universal
character”?
How can a character who feels “different” also be called “universal”?
(2) The Geography Club never discusses actual geography, but the
members
do learn about a geography of sorts. What do they learn? Why does
Russel
compare the locker room to a battle zone, and why does he think of the
school’s
various cliques and social groups as “countries”? Is that an accurate
description
of a high school campus?
(3) Adults almost never appear in the book. Why do you think the
author
chose to do this? In what areas are adults an important part of your
life?
In way areas are adults not an important part?
(4) In the book, bullying takes many forms. Give examples. Can a
friend
bully a friend? What about sexual partners? What is bullying anyway? Is
a
person who claims he or she is being harassed always right?
(5) When Russel is trying to decide whether to forgive Gunnar, he
remembers
how Min had forgiven him, and he thinks, “It was funny how everything
was
fitting together like this.” In what ways do the different characters
in
the book reverse roles? Was Min right to forgive Russel? Was
Russel
right to forgive Gunnar? Kevin?
(6) Through the course of the book, Russel experiences life as a
not-so-popular
kid (in the “Borderlands of Respectability”); an extremely popular kid
(“the
Land of the Popular”); and a total loser (“Outcast Island”). Why do you
think
the author had Russel see life from all those points-of-view? Have you
ever
experienced a shift in popularity?
(7) In the end, Russel and Min decide to break up with Kevin and
Terese.
Did they both make the right choice? Could their relationships have
worked
out if they’d stayed together? How were the two relationships the same,
and
how were they different? Is Kevin a bad person? Is Terese a bad person?
(8) Several times in the book, Russel compares Brian Bund to
Jesus
Christ. What point is he trying to make? What role does Brian play in
the
book, and in the school?
(9) These days, some high schools are very accepting of openly
gay
students, other less so. What was/is your high school like in this
respect?
If a school is accepting of gay students, does that make the book less
relevant?
Suggested Class Projects
(1) Have students make a map or globe of the “countries” (i.e.
cliques)
at their own school. Which “countries” are the largest, and why? If
they
were real countries, which would be the largest? The most powerful?
(2) Hold a “United Nations” meeting, where the different
“countries”
(i.e. cliques) at your school have a session. Have the “ambassadors” to
the
countries list their major grievances, and have other “ambassadors”
respond.
End with a discussion of the ways in which the “countries” share common
ground.
(For an interesting twist, require than all students represent a clique
other
than the one they’re actually in.)
(3) Have the class brainstorm to come up with all the words that
people
use to harass or bully other people. Use a poster or blackboard
to
list them all. Talk about the ways in which a person might feel
being
called these names. Encourage students to be creative in words that
could
be used to bully.
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