Read Maybe in Another Life Online

Authors: Taylor Jenkins Reid

Maybe in Another Life (35 page)

MAYBE IN
ANOTHER
LIFE
TAYLOR JENKINS REID

A Readers Club Guide

A
t the age of twenty-nine, Hannah Martin still has no idea what she wants to do with her life. She has lived in six different cities and held countless meaningless jobs since college, but on the heels of a disastrous breakup, she has finally returned to her hometown of Los Angeles. To celebrate her first night back, her best friend, Gabby, takes Hannah out to a bar—where she meets up with her high school boyfriend, Ethan.

It’s just past midnight when Gabby asks Hannah if she’s ready to go. Ethan quickly offers to give her a ride later if she wants to stay.

Hannah hesitates.

What happens if she leaves with Gabby?

What happens if she leaves with Ethan?

In concurrent storylines, Hannah lives out the effects of each decision. Quickly, these parallel universes develop into surprisingly different stories with far-reaching consequences for Hannah and the people around her, raising questions including: Is anything meant to be? How much in our life is determined by chance? And perhaps most compellingly: Is there such a thing as a soul mate?

Hannah believes there is. And, in both worlds, she believes she’s found him.

QUESTIONS AND TOPICS OF DISCUSSION

1. Hannah opens the novel needing to find a sense of home, and a renewed, stronger sense of self. Does she find both of these things by the novel’s conclusion? Are they different in each ending, or more or less the same?

2. Hannah has a complicated and somewhat distant relationship with her family after they move to London. Hannah’s dad admits,
“Your mother and I realized we had made a huge mistake not bringing you with us. We never should have let you stay in Los Angeles. Never should have left you”
. What do you think about this statement? What does Hannah’s reaction to this confession indicate to you?

3. Why do you think Gabby makes such an effort to spell out her feminism?

4. There are some choices that Hannah faces in both of her stories. Can you identify these? Discuss whether her ultimate decisions differ or are the same in each plot thread. What is their significance?

5. Turn to
p. 194
and reread the conversation Hannah has with Ethan from her hospital bed. What do you make of her statement,
“Whatever would have happened wasn’t
supposed
to happen”
? Do you agree with Hannah that believing we’re all destined for something makes it easier to bear the harder moments?

6. Hannah says,
“I’m starting to think maybe you just pick a place and stay there. You pick a career and do it. You pick a person and commit to him”
. Is this idea—that sometimes, you just have to make a decision and stick with it—mutually exclusive with any notion of fate or destiny?

7. Reread Gabby and Hannah’s conversation about soul mates (
pages 208
–210). Do you agree with Hannah when she says that sometimes you can just
tell
about a person? Have you ever had a person about whom you felt you could just
tell
?

8. While on the surface, the novel may seem to focus on which man Hannah will end up with, there are several types of love explored in
Maybe in Another Life
. Discuss these as a group. Which of the many relationships depicted was your favorite? How did they change and grow in each storyline?

9. Mark tries to defend his decision to leave Gabby by saying,
“I didn’t mean for it to happen. But when you have that kind of connection with someone, nothing can stand in its way”
. What do you think about this? Do you agree with Hannah’s belief that
“your actions in love are not an exception to who you are. They are, in fact, the very definition of who you are”
? How does this jibe with the idea that sometimes you can just
tell
someone is right for you?

10. Did you believe in fate when you started the novel? Did the novel change, challenge, or uphold your opinion?

11. Certainly some of the characters, including Hannah at times, believe in fate. Do you think the book itself suggests that fate exists? What about soul mates?

12. Did you find yourself rooting for one ending versus the other? Do you have an opinion on whether Hannah should have ended up with Henry or with Ethan? If you were Hannah, which ending would you have wanted for yourself?

13. Think about the statement that Jesse makes at the end of the novel:
“Everything that is possible happens”
. If that’s true, what do other versions of your life look like?

ENHANCE YOUR BOOK CLUB

1. Hannah has a special love for cinnamon rolls. In honor of her, make (or buy from your favorite bakery) some cinnamon rolls for your book club.

2. The 1998 movie
Sliding Doors
(starring Gwyneth Paltrow) takes a similar premise as
Maybe in Another Life
, and examines how one woman’s life differs based on whether or not she catches a train. Watch the film as a group, and discuss how its portrayal of two possible outcomes for one woman’s life differs from Hannah’s story. Are the two projects making the same point or contrasting ones?

3. Taylor Jenkins Reid is the author of two other novels,
Forever, Interrupted
and
After I Do
. Pick one to read as a group and compare and contrast it with
Maybe in Another Life
. What do Reid’s earlier books have to say about fate and soul mates?

MILA SHAH

Taylor Jenkins Reid
is the author of
Forever, Interrupted
and
After I Do
. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Alex, and her dog, Rabbit. You can follow her on Twitter at
@TJenkinsReid
.

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Also by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Forever, Interrupted

After I Do

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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2015 by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Cover Design by Melissa Faustine Chang

Cover Art by Getty Images (Woman’s body © Compassionate Eye Foundation; Hair © Noviembre Anita Vela; Retro Palms © Denise Taylor; Frame © Matthias Clamer)

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First Washington Square Press trade paperback edition July 2015

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Reid, Taylor Jenkins.

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