1. Alex and Leo could be described as flip sides of the same
coin. Would you agree with this assessment? In what ways are
theysimilar, and different, in their histories, philosophies, and
actions? Where does Burton fit in, by comparison? Why do you think
Richards chose to open and close the novel by focusing on
Burton?
2. Compare Alex's moral reliance on subjective theories of
"approval and disapproval" (p 171) to Amy's revelation about the
"spirit of the law." (p 177) How do these perspectives differ?
Consider the following passage describing Alex thinking about his
mother: "For a moment when thinking of her each day, he no longer
wanted to rely upon approval or disapproval. He only wanted to love
and forgive." (p. 141). What prevented Alex from following through
with this?
3. Alex describes his life since his mother died as a journey
spent defending her. (p. 353) What do you think he means by
this?
4. Alex experiences occasional attacks of conscience that are
triggered by an awareness of the natural world, such as when he
imagines the wind urging him to confess. (p. 114) How does Alex
view his environment? Discuss these views in comparison with those
of Amy and Markus.
5. Alex came to his love of art and culture during a time when
he witnessed his mother being used by men whom he considered to be
the antithesis of cultured. He scorns hockey, which he sees as the
domain of the rough boys and men who humiliated him all his life,
yetlater, he worries that he's been as close-minded as the men he
disdains. (p. 144) Do you think his pursuit of art was grounded in
passion, or hatred? What prevented him from pursuing it
further?
6. Before Alex falls once again under Leo's influence, he
approaches Minnie's house and the question occurs to him: "Is this
the way of my and Leo's chastisement? (For some reason, he did not
know why, he included Leo.)" (p. 102) How does Alex sense that Leo
will be important in his future? Discuss the next passage, in which
he imagines "strange beings" above him "praying for him, asking him
to be still and know that I am God." Is there something divine at
work here? Do angelic beings appear elsewhere in the novel?
7. Leo claims that responsibility for his actions isout of his
hands because "what has to be must be." (p. 355) Alex at times
finds this idea attractive but it is at odds with his assertion
that man is creator of his own destiny. Where does the lottery
ticket fit into their philosophies? Why do you think Richards chose
to populate the book with so many twists of fate?
8. After aligning himself with Leo, Alex suddenly feels "as if
he had joined some other part of the highway…" (p. 169). What do
you think this means? What does the highway represent in this
novel?
9. Flannery O'Connor wrote in an essay that "[I]n my own
stories, I have found that violence is strangely capable of
returning my characters to reality and preparing them to accept
their moment of grace." Would you say this takes place in
The Lost Highway? Why or why not?
10. Leo appears back in Alex's life as if in response to Alex's
prayer to the God he claims to no longer believe in: "Send me a
friend now, to help me--if you exist, you owe me that!" (p. 145).
Is this an example of hubris on Alex's part? Are there other ways
in which this novel might be described as a modern twist on
classical tragedy?
11. Consider the passage from Aristotle that Markus Paul marks
for Alex. (p. 338) What do you think would have been Alex's future
had he not run into Burton and made the decision he did that
fateful day? Would he have been a better man without that
temptation?
12. Sometimes funny, generally appalling, perhaps what makes us
most uncomfortable about Leo's and Alex's philosophical
rationalizations of wrongdoing is that we may see our own
behaviours reflected in them,even if only slightly. Would you agree
with this statement? Why/why not?
13. (BONUS QUESTION) If you won the lottery, what would you
do?