Hachette Livre Reading Group Guides
Welcome to our Reading Group guide for Still Waters by Camilla Noli. Still Waters is a provoking, unconventional novel
daring to explore one of society’s last great taboos
– the idea that there are some women who are quite
simply neither naturally maternal nor nurturing.
Below are some questions which could be used as
starting points for your reading group’s discussion
of some of the topical issues raised by Still Waters.
- The narrator of Still Waters remains unnamed
throughout the novel. Why do you think the
author has chosen to do this? Do you think it
is a successful device and if so, how and why?
- Still Waters breaks from convention in the fact
that its narrator is not an immediately warm or
likeable woman. At any stage during the reading
of Still Waters did you find yourself feeling sympathetic
towards its narrator? If so, when did you
lose sympathy for her? Did your sympathy return
at any point?
- The narrator provides the reader with a graphic
description of the birth of her first child and its
aftermath, where she had trouble bonding with
the baby. In your opinion do you think this
failure to bond can be seen as explaining any of
her subsequent actions? Do you believe that the
narrator’s behaviour could be attributable to
post-partum depression? Why or why not?
- Do you think the hospital should or could have
been more vigilant in picking up and addressing
the narrator’s ambivalence towards Cassie at the
time of her birth? Do you think this would have
made any difference to her subsequent actions?
• What is your experience of, and views on,
the post-natal care provided by hospitals and
child-health clinics?
• What is your experience of, and views on,
the support provided in our society to families
in general?
- The narrator’s husband, Daniel, is an important
character in Still Waters. To what extent do you
think his actions can be seen as being either a
contributing or driving factor behind the narrator’s
actions and responses throughout the novel?
• Do you think Daniel should bear any of the
responsibility for what happens in the novel?
- The narrator claims that her relationship with
Daniel is similar to that between herself and her
father. Do you see similarities in the relationships,
particularly when taking the roles of the
narrator’s mother and daughter into account?
Do you see differences?
- The narrator partly blames her mother for the
lack of confidence which she experiences in her
own mothering abilities. Do you think this is true?
• Do you believe that the mothering instinct is
innate, or do you think it has to be learned?
- One of the images used in Still Waters is of a
Möbius strip*. In what way do you see the image? Reading Group Notes
* A Möbius strip is a mathematical construct which can be made by
taking a flat band of material, giving it a half twist and then joining
it.Theresulting structure has only one side and one surface. Sometimes
known as the ‘eternity symbol’, the Möbius strip has fascinated
artists and writers since its discovery in 1858. M.C. Escher, amongst
others, has used it as the basis for a number of his etched images.
of the Möbius strip as being important to the
novel? You may wish to consider this question
with regard to both the nature of the narrator
and the structure of the book.
- Still Waters is a self-contained novel told from
the point of view of the narrator and main
character. To what extent do you think her story
can be fully believed? Are there any points in
the novel where you feel the narrator’s authority
as storyteller, and ultimate source of truth for
the novel, is undermined? How would any such
undermining affect your reading of the novel?
- What do you think has become of the narrator
by the end of Still Waters? Do you think it is
important that the reader knows from where the
narrator last speaks?
- One of the books which the author says influenced
the writing of Still Waters is Dr Robert
Hare’s book Without Conscience: The Disturbing
World of the Psychopaths Among Us. In this
book Dr Hare describes a psychopath as: someone
who is capable of ‘using their charm and
chameleon-like abilities to cut a wide swath
through society and leaving a wake of ruined
lives behind them’. A person ‘lacking in empathy
and the ability to form warm emotional relationships
with others . . . who functions without
conscience’. To what extent do you view the
narrator of StillWaters as exhibiting psychopathiclike
qualities? To what extent do you think she
is simply highly narcissistic?