
Is the fortune-telling pig mere light relief or something more?.In the context of women's lives in the nineteenth century, what do you make of Rita's reluctance to marry? What brings her to reconsider?.What are the real-life consequences of these stories? Which characters have faith in these stories, and which do not? How does it affect their actions? Folk beliefs are still alive on the riverbank - changelings, witches, and dragons are all still real to some, and the Armstrongs believe Bess has a Seeing eye.How many types or styles of story are told in Once Upon a River? Be as wide in your interpretation of "story" as you like!.Does it remind you of any other stories in particular? The story of Quietly the ferryman is an invention of the author, but it contains many elements from traditional or mythological tales. Storytelling is central to Once Upon a River.
It's easy to get carried away talking about the key families in the plot, the Vaughans, the Armstrongs, and Lily and her brother, but what about the family at the inn? What important functions do they perform? And what do the drinkers - largely unnamed - add?. What does it mean to Robert Armstrong? What does family mean to Daunt and Rita? And Victor? What about Lily? Consider the importance of family in the novel. Is Lily White responsible for her actions?. They are born with their own hearts and they cannot be made otherwise, no matter what love a man lavishes on them." Do you agree with Armstrong's lament at the end of the book? Is it possible if he had been a different kind of father things might have turned out differently for Robin? A child is not an empty vessel, Fleet, to be formed in whatever way the parent thinks fit. "Sometimes I think there is nothing more a man can do. How does Robert Armstrong, raised outside family life in circumstances of financially cushioned neglect, turn out to be such a good man?. In the end, what brings them together? How? A wedge is driven between the Vaughans as they struggle to come to terms with the loss of Amelia. By the time Vaughan had written a concise two-page account of Amelia's kidnapping to his father in New Zealand, "the horror of it was quite excised." What effect does the act of storytelling have on Vaughan? What about the other characters?. Could the novel have been set at another time in history? What would have had to be different if the author had chosen another period?
To judge by such details as photography and transport as described in the novel, the events appear to be set in the 1870s or thereabouts.What role does the Swan itself play? Could this story have taken place anywhere else? The Swan Inn, Buscot Lodge, and the towns and villages along the river Thames create a very specific atmosphere for the story that unfolds.