Page 16 of Clay


  5. Do you believe that Davie is a reliable narrator? Does he actually see the fantastical things he claims to see while helping Stephen? Is there any other explanation? Use examples from the text to support your argument.

  6. What do you think is the truth about Stephen’s parents? Is it the story he tells Davie on Part Three: Five through Part Three: Six? Or is it the story he tells Davie on Part Three: Twenty-three?

  7. On the night of Clay’s creation, Davie prays, “Let me believe in nowt…. Let God be gone. Let the soul be nowt but anillusion…. Let nowt matter” (Part Three: One). Why do you think Davie wishes for this? Do you think this prayer has permanent effects on him?

  8. On Part Three: Twelve, Prat tells his class, “Our passion to create goes hand in hand with our passion to destroy.” How do you think the story of Clay’s creation illustrates this paradox?

  9. What is Stephen? Is he a misunderstood boy, or something darker and more dangerous? What moments in the story make you believe this? Which option do you think is more frightening?

  10. At the end of the novel, on Part Four: Six, Crazy Mary has a vision of angels. When she asks whether Davie can see them, he considers:

  Whatever she was, she saw something that I couldn’t share. I saw her trembling pointing finger. I saw rooftops, branches, twigtips, leaves. I saw the silhouettes of passing birds. And then the dazzling blue void, the gaping emptiness that stretched forever and ever.

  “Yes,” I told her. “Yes, I see.”

  And I lowered my head, and closed my eyes, and gazed into the shifting shadows and the darkness of my mind.

  What do you think Davie is feeling here? What has he lost? Has he been permanently changed by his experience with Stephen?

  —in his own words—

  a conversation with

  DAVID ALMOND

  a conversation with david almond

  Q. What made you want to write a novel that deals with the themes Clay addresses: good and evil, faith and disbelief, the dual nature of man?

  A. I didn’t really decide to write about those things. I wanted to write about ordinary kids in an ordinary place doing extraordinary things. The deeper implications of what they were up to emerged as I wrote the book. In many ways, a writer doesn’t really decide what he writes about. His subjects and themes come and get him.

  Q. You’ve said before that the people and places you encountered during your childhood have inspired many of your stories. Is your background similar to Davie’s?

  A. Yes, very similar. I am not Davie, though I enjoyed playing with the notion that I might be. I grew up in the same town, Felling-on-Tyne. Many of the places named in the book, especially during Davie’s walk with Clay, are real places. I was an altar boy at a church called St. Patrick’s. I had friends like Geordie and Maria. I knew a couple of women who were a bit like Crazy Mary. But many of the places and people are imaginary. I love working with a blend of the real and the imagined.

  Q. Have your feelings about faith and religion changed as you’ve gotten older, or do you think you retain the same ideas you had at Davie’s age?

  A. I guess I’m forever working out my feelings about many things, including faith and religion. When I was a boy, I suppose I thought that adults arrived at settled ideas about the world, about human existence, about religion. It’s not true, of course. There are no final answers, and we keep on searching and questioning and being amazed and mystified. Maybe writing fiction is my way of doing this.

  Q. Geordie tells Davie on Part One: Eight, “You’re a simpleton…. You do not see the wickedness that’sin the world!” Do you think Davie should be less trusting of Stephen?

  A. It’s tempting to say yes, Davie should have been more suspicious. But in the process of arriving at his new knowledge about the world, Davie has been on a major journey of emotional, intellectual, spiritual exploration. What Stephen describes as being a “simpleton” is really the description of a boy who is uncertain, who is growing quickly, and who is simply fascinated by the world and its possibility.

  Q. Prat’s lectures on art run throughout the novel. What is the connection between art and what happens to Davie?

  A. There are so many connections, and I enjoyed writing about Prat, and allowing him to explore the nature of human creativity. Davie and Stephen’s creation of Clay is maybe the ultimate artistic act—they create something that is not only beautiful but that comes to life. In doing this they challenge the idea that there can be only one creator. The artist becomes a kind of God.

  Q. And Maria? She’s the only character Davie tells the whole story to, and she believes him without hesitation. Why did you include Maria in the story?

  A. Maria is outside of the Stephen/Davie/Mouldy/Clay axis, and so has a kind of objectivity. Davie tells her the tale to test out its validity, also to get the tale out into the “real” world. He’s also learning a lot about the nature of love and friendship. He has a closeness to Maria that is of course very different from his closeness to Geordie. He’s falling for her, and he’s also found a friend with whom he can discuss deeper, more interesting subjects than he can with Geordie and his old boy mates.

  Q. What is Stephen Rose, in your mind? Is he just a misunderstood child, as Father O’Mahoney claims: “A boy with problems. There but for the grace of God” (Part Four: Three). Or is he true evil?

  A. When I began the book, and as I wrote the early chapters, I think I did share Father O’Mahoney’s view of Stephen. I thought he’d be “tamed,” that he’d find a way to be included in the community. I thought that Davie, Geordie, Maria, Father O’Mahoney, would find the goodness in him and draw it out. And I thought that part of my job as the writer would be to discover his hidden goodness too. Well, he evaded all of us. As I wrote on, I had to take many deep breaths and recognize that he was in many ways beyond salvation. He goes off at the end, unredeemed, maybe to create havoc elsewhere. Evil? It’s not really a word I like, but he’s certainly not a force for good.

  Q. Why do you think Stephen needs Davie to create Clay? He seems fairly powerful on his own.

  A. I don’t think that he really does need Davie to create Clay. But he wants to tempt and to disillusion and to corrupt Davie. And he wants to test out and to demonstrate his own wicked powers.

  Q. To what extent do you think Davie willingly helps Stephen? And to what extent is he being manipulated? Does Davie have any control over his fate?

  A. At any moment, Davie could in theory withdraw from it all and tell Stephen to get lost, but I think he is just too fascinated by the possibilities that are presented by Stephen. Yes, he is manipulated and at times maybe hypnotized, and at times he is terrified by what’s going on, but he’s an independent human being. He wants to explore the darkness.

  Q. At the end of the novel, Davie seems to recognize that he has lost something. How do you think the experience has changed him?

  A. Yes, I think he’s changed massively. He is less secure in his faith. He has moved beyond his old mates with their banter and their feuds. He has been closely involved in the killing of another boy. He has helped to create a living creature, which he has also helped to destroy. He has a deeper knowledge of himself and the world, but that knowledge is accompanied by lots of disillusion. He is maybe lonelier. But he’s ready to move on. He’s growing up fast, and he’s falling in love with Maria.

  Q. Do you think Davie will ever recover completely?

  A. We go through lots of crises and recoveries all through life. It’s amazing what we can go through, and what we can survive. Yes, he’ll recover, he’ll keep on growing up, and he has a strong mind and a good heart so he’ll be fine. But the effects of his involvement with Stephen and Clay will be with him for the rest of his life.

  related titles

  Counting Stars • David Almond

  978-0-440-41826-9

  With stories that shimmer and vibrate in the bright heat of memory, David Almond creates a glowing mosaic of his life growing up in a large, loving Cath
olic family in northeastern England.

  Heaven Eyes • David Almond

  978-0-440-22910-0

  Erin Law and her friends in the orphanage are labeled Damaged Children. They run away one night, traveling downriver on a raft. What they find on their journey is stranger than you can imagine.

  Kit’s Wilderness • David Almond

  978-0-440-41605-0

  Kit Watson and John Askew look for the childhood ghosts of their long-gone ancestors in the mines of Stoneygate.

  Secret Heart • David Almond

  978-0-440-41827-6

  The transformative power of imagination and beauty flows through this story of a boy who walks where others don’t dare to go—a boy with the heart of a tiger, an unlikely hero who knows that sometimes the most important things are the most mysterious.

  Skellig • David Almond

  978-0-440-22908-7

  Michael feels helpless because of his baby sister’s illness, until he meets a creature called Skellig.

  readers circle books

  Before We Were Free

  Julia Alvarez

  978-0-440-23784-6

  Under a dictatorship in the Dominican Republic in 1960, young Anita lives through a fight for freedom that changes her world forever.

  Finding Miracles

  Julia Alvarez

  978-0-553-49406-8

  Fifteen-year-old Milly has never told anyone in her small

  Vermont town that she’s adopted. But when Pablo, a refugee from Milly’s birth country, transfers to her school, she is forced to confront her true identity.

  Falcondance

  Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

  978-0-440-23885-0

  In this suspenseful novel, a falcon shapeshifter journeys back to the homeland his parents have tried their best to forget, and is forced to choose between his duty and his destiny.

  A Great and Terrible Beauty

  Libba Bray

  978-0-385-73231-4

  Sixteen-year-old Gemma Doyle is sent to the Spence Academy in London after tragedy strikes her family in India. Lonely, guilt-ridden, and prone to visions of the future that have an uncomfortable habit of coming true, Gemma finds her reception a chilly one. But at Spence, Gemma’s power to attract the supernatural unfolds; she becomes entangled with the school’s most powerful girls and discovers her mother’s connection to a shadowy group called the Order. A curl-up-under-the-covers Victorian gothic.

  Rebel Angels

  Libba Bray

  978-0-385-73341-0

  Gemma Doyle is looking forward to a holiday from Spence Academy—spending time with her friends in the city, attending balls in fancy gowns with plunging necklines, and dallying with the handsome Simon Middleton. Yet amid these distractions, her visions intensify—visions of three girls in white, to whom something horrific has happened that only the realms can explain.

  Walking Naked

  Alyssa Brugman

  978-0-440-23832-4

  Megan doesn’t know a thing about Perdita, since she would never dream of talking to her. Only when the two girls are thrown together in detention does Megan begin to see Perdita as more than the school outcast. Slowly, Megan finds herself drawn into a challenging almost-friendship.

  Colibrí

  Ann Cameron

  978-0-440-42052-1

  At age four, Colibrí was kidnapped from her parents in Guatemala City, and ever since then she’s traveled with Uncle, who believes Colibrí will lead him to treasure. Danger mounts as Uncle grows desperate for his fortune—and as Colibrí grows daring in seeking her freedom.

  Code Orange

  Caroline B. Cooney

  978-0-385-73260-4

  Mitty Blake loves New York City, and even after 9/11, he’s always felt safe. Mitty doesn’t worry about terrorists or blackouts or grades or anything, which is why he’s late getting started on his Advanced Bio report. He considers it good luck when he finds some old medical books in his family’s weekend house. But when he discovers an envelope with two scabs in one of the books, his report is no longer about the grade—it’s about life and death.

  The Chocolate War

  Robert Cormier

  978-0-375-82987-1

  Jerry Renault dares to disturb the universe in this groundbreaking and now classic novel, an unflinching portrait of corruption and cruelty in a boys’ prep school.

  I Am the Cheese

  Robert Cormier

  978-0-375-84039-5

  A boy’s search for his father becomes a desperate journey to unlock a secret past. But it is a past that must not be remembered if the boy is to survive. Since its publication in 1977, Robert Cormier’s taut, suspenseful novel has become a celebrated classic—with chilling implications.

  Bucking the Sarge

  Christopher Paul Curtis

  978-0-440-41331-8

  Luther T. Farrell has got to get out of Flint, Michigan. His mother, aka the Sarge, has milked the system to build an empire of slum housing and group homes. Luther is just one of the many people trapped in the Sarge’s Evil Empire—but he’s about to bust out.

  When Zachary Beaver Came to Town

  Kimberly Willis Holt

  978-0-440-23841-6

  Toby’s small, sleepy Texas town is about to get a jolt with the arrival of Zachary Beaver, billed as the fattest boy in the world. Toby is in for a summer unlike any other—a summer sure to change his life.

  The Parallel Universe of Liars

  Kathleen Jeffrie Johnson

  978-0-440-23852-2

  Surrounded by superficiality, infidelity, and lies, Robin, a self-described chunk, isn’t sure what to make of her hunky neighbor’s sexual advances, or of the attention paid her by a new boy in town who seems to notice more than her body.

  The Lightkeeper’s Daughter

  Iain Lawrence

  978-0-385-73127-0

  Imagine growing up on a tiny island with no one but your family. For Squid McCrae, returning to the island after three years away unleashes a storm of bittersweet memories, revelations, and accusations surrounding her brother’s death.

  Crushed

  Laura and Tom McNeal

  978-0-375-83121-8

  Audrey Reed and her two best friends are a nerdy little trio, so everyone is shocked when the handsome, mysterious Wickham Hill asks her out. Soon Audrey is so smitten that she hardly pays attention to the vicious underground school newspaper, which threatens to crush teachers and students—and expose some dangerous secrets.

  Zipped

  Laura and Tom McNeal

  978-0-375-83098-3

  In a suspenseful novel of betrayal, forgiveness, and first love, fifteen-year-old Mick Nichols opens an e-mail he was never meant to see—and learns a terrible secret.

  A Brief Chapter in My Impossible Life

  Dana Reinhardt

  978-0-375-84691-5

  Simone’s starting her junior year in high school. She’s got a terrific family and amazing friends. And she’s got a secret crush on a really smart and funny guy. Then her birth mother contacts her. Simone’s always known she was adopted, but she never wanted to know anything about it. Who is this woman? Why has she contacted Simone now? The answers lead Simone to question everything she once took for granted.

  Pool Boy

  Michael Simmons

  978-0-385-73196-6

  Brett Gerson is the kind of guy you love to hate—until his father is thrown in prison and Brett has to give up the good life. That’s when some swimming pools enter his world and change everything.

  Stargirl

  Jerry Spinelli

  978-0-440-41677-7

  Stargirl. From the day she arrives at quiet Mica High in a burst of color and sound, the hallways hum with the murmur of “Stargirl, Stargirl.” The students are enchanted. Then they turn on her.

  The Gospel According to Larry

  Janet Tashjian

  978-0-440-23792-1

  Josh Swensen’s virtual alter ego, Larry, becomes a media s
ensation. While it seems as if the whole world is trying to figure out Larry’s true identity,

  Josh feels trapped inside his own creation.

  ALSO BY DAVID ALMOND

  Skellig

  Kit’s Wilderness

  Heaven Eyes

  Counting Stars

  Secret Heart

  The Fire-Eaters

  Two Plays

  Kate, the Cat and the Moon

  Published by Delacorte Press an imprint of Random House Children’s Books a division of Random House, Inc. New York

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2006 by David Almond

  Originally published in Great Britian in 2005 by Hadder Children’s Books

  All rights reserved.

  Delacorte Press and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  Visit us on the Web! www.randomhouse.com/teens

  Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at www.randomhouse.com/teachers