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Table of Contents
About The Book
Miranda’s parents live in a dilapidated house in rural France that they share with two llamas, eight ducks, five chickens, two cats, and a freezer full of food dating back to 1983.
Miranda’s father is a retired professor of philosophy who never loses an argument. Miranda’s mother likes to bring conversation back to “the War,” although she was born after it ended. Married for fifty years, they are uncommonly set in their ways. Miranda plays the role of translator when she visits, communicating the desires or complaints of one parent to the other and then venting her frustration to her sister and her daughter. At the end of a visit, she reports “the usual desire to kill.”
This wry, propulsive story about a singularly eccentric family and the sibling rivalry, generational divides, and long-buried secrets that shape them, is a glorious debut novel from a seasoned playwright with immense empathy and a flair for dialogue.
Reading Group Guide
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Discussion Questions
Camilla Barnes unites comedy with pathos in this hilarious, heartfelt tragicomic novel. The provocative title, The Usual Desire to Kill, sets the stage for the marriage of humor and high emotion. How does the title reflect the book’s themes or characters’ inner and outer conflicts?
How does the author use humor to balance the novel’s heavier themes, such as familial strife, aging, and regret? Can you identify specific moments where comedy provides relief?
How does the theme of familial obligations and expectations manifest throughout the novel? Which character feels this weight the most?
What role does regret play in the novel? How do the characters cope with their past choices and the concept of forgiveness?
There are various references to the “sort of people” the eccentric family identify and disidentify with. In a letter to Kitty, Mum seems to lament the “sort of person” she mixes with now (page 145); Mum looked down on Madeleine because she was not “our sort” (page 159). What social identity does the family most seem to align with, and what identity do they want to distance themselves from? What behaviors, rituals, and/or beliefs allow Mum and the other family members to adhere to this collective “type” of person? In what ways do the characters falter from this type?
What is the significance of the animals, particularly the llamas and cats, in the story? How do they mirror or contrast with the human characters?
Discuss the importance of Oxford and other settings like Poitiers and Hereford. How do these locations contribute to the character development and construct themes related to change, growth, or regression?
Consider the structure of the book: the epistolary portions in the letters to Kitty and the emails between Miranda and Charlotte, the shifting POVs, the play-like staging. How does this structure help you understand the characters? In what ways are the stakes heightened by this varied structure, and how does the structure influence your desire to extract “meaning” from the story?
Reread “The Purple Jar” and discuss what this tale cautions against. How do the decisions made by the family relate to the story’s parable of desire and disappointment, and in what ways has the family adequately averted what the story warns? Some contemporary scholars have read this tale as a parable against consumer capitalism. Debate reasons for and against this reading, and provide examples of other contemporary lessons or warnings to be heeded from this tale.
Identify and discuss the quirks of each central character—Mum, Dad, Charlotte, and Miranda. How do they complement each other? How do their traits cause them to clash?
Mum and Dad are able to clash and end up relatively unscathed after tiffs. How has the couple maintained their relationship for decades? Discuss how the couple has grown, stagnated, or regressed over the years.
Discuss the social mores of mid-twentieth-century England and how they impacted the women in the novel. How would Mum have fared differently if she were brought up in contemporary England? Would her choices and life change much if the story were set in the mid-twentieth-century United States?
Discuss the role silence plays in the novel. Alice’s father is not to be discussed, neither is Charlotte’s ex-husband, and Dad never tells Mum the truth about what happened with Barbara—he tells Alice “real power lies in knowing what you don’t know” (page 220). Interpret this statement and discuss the cultural values that contribute to silence, considering the merits of silence and not knowing.
In Miranda’s email to Charlotte, she tells her that their parents’ clinging on to an ancient edition of The Times Atlas, and Mum’s never having left Europe (except for Rhodesia), is “surely . . . symbolic of [their parents’] life.” Of what are these behaviors symbolic? Interpret Mum’s nostalgic longing for a Great Britain, and discuss how nostalgia can be both comforting and injurious.
Dad says that Epictetus has taught him that he “should shut up and be happy with what [he has]” (page 65). In what other ways can you glean how philosophy has helped Dad, or the rest of the family, cope with, and even be eager for, life? Debate the merits of heeding Epictetus’s teachings and discuss how adopting the shut-up-and-be-happy outlook would, or wouldn’t, work for you.
Discuss your interpretation of the ending of the novel, as the curtains close and audience members are released from the enrapturing grasp of the play—“everything that has been has ceased” (page 246). What future do you imagine for the characters, and how does the concluding page influence your envisioning of not only the characters’ fates, but your own conception of art and life?
Enhance Your Book Club
Select King Lear as a companion read to The Usual Desire to Kill and discuss the parallels between the play and Camilla Barnes’s debut novel.
Research some general philosophical schools and concepts—existentialism, stoicism, nihilism; logical fallacies, vagueness, and “God is Dead”— and discuss the relative merits of adopting them as an outlook in your life.
Cast the movie, play, or television series of The Usual Desire to Kill. Which professional actors, or members of your group, could you envision playing the characters in the novel?
Product Details
- Publisher: Scribner (April 1, 2025)
- Length: 256 pages
- ISBN13: 9781668062845
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Raves and Reviews
Praise for The Usual Desire to Kill
"Empathetic... intimate... Barnes explores long marriage, sibling rivalry, truths behind shifting memories, and family secrets as well as examining the decisions people make in life, the long-term effects of those decisions, and how well one truly knows the people they love." —Booklist, STARRED review
"Playwright Barnes combines humor with pathos in her heart-wrenching debut...the genius of the novel lies in the ways Barnes highlights how parents can never be fully known to their children, no matter how observant their children are... An unforgettable story about the limits of judging others." —Publishers Weekly, STARRED review
“I love nothing more than reading about eccentric families, and the family in The Usual Desire to Kill is just that. Miranda and her sister work to uncover the true story of their parents' marriage, only to have their brilliant, quirky mother and father deflect them at every turn. Barnes has written a witty, moving novel about characters who, even when they seem incapable of speaking honestly, are worth listening to nonetheless.” —Ann Napolitano, author of Hello Beautiful and Dear Edward
“Hilarious and heartbreaking, packed with acute and painfully funny observations about relationships and family dynamics. Barnes’s dialogue is pitch-perfect, and her characters dance off the page and straight into your heart. Mum and Dad are magnificent creations, eccentric and endearing, both instantly recognizable and utterly singular.” —Monica Ali, author of Love Marriage and Brick Lane
"In The Usual Desire to Kill, Camilla Barnes deftly deciphers the secret language of one family, often with deeply funny and knowing results. I loved spending time in the very specific, complicated, and memorable world of this novel." —Meg Wolitzer, author of The Female Persuasion and The Wife
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