Introduction

Maggie Silver has a lot on her plate. She is struggling to pay her mortgage, support her ill

mother, and climb the career ladder at an exclusive, high-powered PR firm whose clients are

tabloid-worthy movie stars and famous athletes. She’s been trained to clean up other people’s

messes, but now Maggie is asked to take on her toughest client yet: Senator Henry Paxton. The

distinguished statesman from Southern California also happens to be the father of Anabelle,

Maggie’s estranged best friend from high school.

 

When Senator Paxton’s young female aid is murdered, Maggie must run damage control and

prevent the scandal from growing—a challenge at any time, but even more when she realizes

the Senator isn’t telling the whole story. Finding herself once again wrapped up in the Paxtons’

glamorous world after all these years, Maggie is unexpectedly flooded with memories—some

of them wonderful, others difficult to revisit. She can’t help but dwell on those stormy years in

high school when her friendship with Anabelle was dramatically severed after a tragedy that

neither of them has been able to forget. As Maggie gets further embroiled in the lives of the

Paxtons, she realizes that the ties of her old friendship are stronger and more complicated than

she realized. Torn between loyalties to her mother, her love interests, other clients, and the

individual members of the Paxton family, Maggie has to decide how much of her own life she’s

willing to sacrifice in order to save those she loves.

 

Topics & Questions for Discussion

1. Damage Control opens with a statement from the main character in which she explains how

things are in her dreams, in contrast to how things happen in reality. Why do you think the

author decided to open the book this way? What effect did it have on your reading experience?

 

2. Discuss the significance of the 1993 beach party in the prologue. How does that night

develop deeper meaning as new aspects are revealed throughout the narrative? How might

the novel have been different if the entire story of the 1993 event had been detailed in the

beginning?

 

3. Maggie describes second chances as “the American way” (p. 13). Do you agree with this

idea? Why or why not? In what ways does Maggie’s professional life mirror her personal life?

 

4. What was your reaction when Senator Henry Paxton recognized Maggie Silver at the end of

Chapter 4? Do you think most people would have recognized a former child’s teenage friend in

a professional role? Did this raise any suspicions?

 

5. Maggie is infatuated with perfumes and scents. Why do you think the author choose to give

Maggie this heightened sense of smell? Identify some of the scents she picks up on and discuss

how her observations contribute to those moments in the narrative.

 

6. Compare and contrast Maggie’s use of pills with her mother’s smoking and her deceased

father’s drinking. How is Maggie’s dependence different? Does this difference make it more

acceptable? Why or why not?

 

7. What do you think makes Maggie more uncomfortable: when Faraday knows things about

friends like Anabelle, or when he knows things about her that she thought were secret? Why do

you think her employer’s vast intelligence bothers her at times? Use examples from the novel

to support your answer.

 

8. In an already complex damage control case, how does Oliver Goldman of the U.S. Attorney

General’s office complicate the situation further? Would you have cooperated with him had

you been in Maggie’s place? Why or why not?

 

9. In addition to the main Paxton case, Maggie must juggle other cases, such as the Holloway

au pair case and Salazar rape case. Compare and contrast the different cases and discuss. Did

Maggie’s dealings with these additional cases help her in any way with the Paxtons? If so, how?

 

10. Discuss the complications that resulted from the murder of Anabelle’s husband, Randall.

Before the reveal at the novel’s end, who did you think pulled the trigger? Explain how you

came to this conclusion and whether or not you were surprised by the revelation.

 

11. Maggie is often forced to manage conflicting allegiances: Faraday and Blair; the Paxton

family and the Blair agency; the law and the case; truth and image. How well do you think she

balances these relationships?

 

12. In addition to all the complexities of her cases, Maggie also balances dating and shopping,

conflicts with her mom who has cancer, ghosts from the past, and drug dependency. How did

so many simultaneous conflicts affect her as a character? Did you relate to her situation in any

way?

 

13. Anabelle surprises Maggie by saying: “You were always a liar…That’s one thing I admired

about you” (p. 311). Were you as surprised at this perspective as Maggie? Discuss whether you

agree or disagree with Anabelle’s assessment of Maggie.

 

14. On page 342, Luke reveals to Maggie what was supposed to happen that summer night in

1993. How does Maggie find a glimmer of comfort in this ultimate betrayal? How did you feel

about Luke’s explanation?

 

Enhance Your Book Club

1. Maggie has a strong sense of smell and focuses on scents and the emotions they evoked.

How keen is your own sense of smell? Have each member of the group bring in a favorite

perfume, candle, or scent. With a blindfold, conduct a smell test to see who can identify which

smells. For extra fun, write down how each one makes you feel, and then compare results

when everyone has had a chance to sniff.

 

2. Maggie was faced with a number of difficult decisions in this story that had no real right or

wrong answers. Sometimes it was the lesser of two evils or the greater of two goods. Pinpoint

one decision Maggie made in the book that you would have made differently and explain your

choice. How might the book have been different had that one decision been altered?

 

3. In the end, Maggie is offered a position as co-vice president at her firm. Imagine you are

Maggie’s best friend. What would your advice be? Should she take the exalted position, or

escape her exhausting lifestyle? Make the case and convince Maggie to do what you think

would be best.