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38 Engaging Verity Book Club Questions

Last Updated on November 11, 2023 by Louisa

If you’ve chosen the gripping and mind-bending story that is Verity by Colleen Hoover for your next book club, then you’re going to need to come in armed and ready with some book club questions.

This psychological thriller is famous for leaving readers questioning what’s real and what’s not until the very last page, and even then, there are questions left unanswered.

This is why it’s such a good read for a book club. There are so many angles you can take, and the suspenseful plot isn’t the only thing that makes this book perfect for a book club discussion.

Verity has complex characters, controversial themes, and a twist ending that will have everyone debating and analyzing.

That’s why we’ve put together a list of thought-provoking Verity book club questions to help guide your discussion and delve deeper into the complexities of this captivating novel.

So grab a cup of tea, get a notepad and pen, and let’s dive into the best book club questions about Verity by Colleen Hoover!

Related Reading: Review of Verity by Colleen Hoover

Affiliate Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you, if you make a purchase through any of these links. 


Synopsis of Verity

Verity by colleen hoover cover

Verity by Colleen Hoover is an exciting suspense novel that has the reader asking questions, making assumptions, and unravelling a mystery as they read through the pages.

The book follows Lowen Ashleigh, a struggling writer who is having a lot of financial difficulties.

Verity has been left disabled after a car crash, meaning Lowen has to visit the family home and sort through her notes in order to complete the books.

Then we have Verity Crawford, a best-selling author who’s suffered from an injury and can’t continue her books.

However, she has a popular series and fans are eagerly waiting for the remaining books.

That’s when Verity’s husband Jeremy hires Lowen to finish the series. As Lowen is reading through all the notes Verity has about her series, she finds something she wasn’t prepared for.

It’s an unfinished autobiography about Verity’s life.

When Lowen accidentally stumbles across Verity’s secret memoir, she uncovers more secrets about Verity, her husband Jeremy, and their children, than she bargained for.

It even details events from the night of her daughter’s death. The truth is more horrifying than anyone could expect and the worst part is, that Jeremy doesn’t know anything.

Lowen must ask herself, should she keep the memoir a secret? And what really happened to Verity?

Related post: Books like Verity


Spoiler Alert! 

Please note that the questions below contain spoilers for the book.


Generic Book Club Questions for Verity

To get the ball rolling, let’s begin with some generic book club questions to get the ball rolling.

Generally speaking, these book club questions about Verity are designed to encourage every member of your group to say something about the book.

Perhaps you have a shy member or a newbie who needs a little nudge to open up – then these will help give them the confidence to speak up.

  • What were your expectations before reading Verity?
  • How did Verity make you feel?
  • Were there any characters that you felt you can relate to in any way?
  • Did you feel this was a slow-burning novel or a real page-turner?
  • Which was the most interesting scene in the book, in your opinion?
  • What do you think the front cover represents?
  • Let’s talk about the ending. Were you shocked?
  • What are the key principles you have learned from the book? What have you taken away from the story?
  • Would you recommend this book to others?
  • What did you think about the book? (obvious, but we have to say it).

Verity Book Club Discussion Questions

Once you’ve gone through the general questions, you might want to open up a deeper and more meaningful discussion.

Here are book club discussion questions for Verity to help you have a more meaningful discussion…

  • Let’s talk about the opening scene, which was exceptionally graphic. Why do you think Lowen and Jeremy met in this way? What was the reason why the writer added this scene to the novel?
  • Did the ending seem surprising to you? Why or why not?
  • Do you think Verity is a bad person for the decisions she made about the twins?
  • Do you believe Verity and Jeremy were a happy couple? What do you think of their relationship?
  • Have you read any other novels like this? How does this compare?
  • As you progress through the novel, we learn more of Verity’s secrets through the memoir. What secret shocked you the most? Were there any you didn’t see coming?
  • How did you find the story-within-a-story elements of this book? Did it help add suspense or did it make it feel stretched?
  • When Lowen arrives at the house, there are some instances that felt a bit odd. The movement of curtains, the way Jeremy speaks with Crew, did any of that feel sinister to you?
  • The story was set in a rural mansion by the lake. What significance do you think the setting had to the story?
  • Have you read any other books by Colleen Hoover? How does this compare?
  • Do you think Lowen would find Jeremy attractive if it wasn’t for the manuscript?

Educated Book Club Questions for Verity

Verity is a story that has a lot of psychological and sociological elements and hidden messages.

If you’d like to get more in-depth into this element, then here are some educated book club questions for Verity.

  • Did the storyline feel too coincidental to you, or were you surprised by each plot twist?
  • Verity writes her novels from the villain’s point of view, what significance do you think that has on the story? Do you think it’s a coincidence that Colleen Hoover portrays Verity as the villain?
  • Is Verity actually the villain, after reading the letter?
  • Why do you think Lowen falls for Jeremy? Do you think it’s the way Verity writes about him in her manuscript or is there something else?
  • Do you think that was Verity’s hand that wrote the manuscript? What about the letter, do you think she wrote this?
  • Who do you think the letter was intended for really, Lowen or Jeremy?
  • What do you think of the term “chronics.” Do you think there can be chronics in real life?
  • Do you think Lowen was right not to show Jeremy the manuscript? Why or why not?
  • What about the letter – was she right to hide this?
  • Lowen locks her bedroom door because she sleepwalks. Do you think it’s ever acceptable to lock a bedroom door? Under what circumstances?
  • We learn that Verity never read Lowen’s book, but it was Jeremy who read it and recommended her for the job. What other secrets do you think Jeremy is hiding?
  • Let’s talk about Crew. Do you think he was afraid of his mother after the canoe? Or was it love that kept him quiet when she was faking her illness? What do you think was going on in his head?
  • Colleen Hoover writes; “I stretch truths where I see fit. I’m a writer.” How much of the manuscript, and the letter, do you think were stretched truths?
  • Do you think that reading the manuscript was an invasion of privacy or was it just “research”?
  • Let’s talk about the letter: Do you believe it? Or do you think she realized the manuscript would be discovered and it was her last-ditch effort to convince Jeremy?
  • With the letter in mind. Do you think Verity is a sociopath? or are they all sociopaths?
  • There’s a scene when Lowen and Jeremy are not careful and Lowen gets pregnant. What do you think about that? Do you think they were wrong to be careless given they only knew each other a couple of weeks? Do you think Lowen wanted to get pregnant because it would make Jeremy love her more?

5 Suggestions for What to Read Next

Now you have a list of Verity book club questions to come armed to your next book club meeting, it’s time to plan the next one. Here are some suggestions for books to read next.

1. American Dirt – Jeanine Cummins

american dirt by jeanine cummins

American Dirt is a New York Times bestseller and Oprah Book Club selection, which should be high on any book club’s list of books to read!

It tells the story of Lydia, her husband, and her son as they live in Acapulco.

The town’s cartels are becoming increasingly dangerous, and Lydia’s comfortable life is threatened when her husband publishes an exposé on the area’s new drug lord.

Forced to flee with the rest of Acapulco, Lydia and Luca embark on a journey for a better future.

An emotional read about resilience, hope, and survival, this mesmerizing novel immerses readers in a story full of danger and heartbreak as each refugee struggles to find safety during their journey to freedom.


2. The Lost Apothecary – Sarah Penner

The Lost Apothecary by Penner Sarah

The Lost Apothecary is a suspense-filled novel of secrets, vengeance, and sisterhood set in 18th-century London.

In the deeps of this city, an apothecary shop serves an unusual array of customers – with tales spreading about a mysterious woman who dispenses deadly poisons to women desperate for protection from abusive husbands or partners.

Tragedy strikes when the apothecary’s latest patron – a precocious twelve-year-old – makes a fatal mistake that leaves effects that ripple through centuries.

On her tenth wedding anniversary alone in present-day London, Caroline Parcewell discovers she is researching unsolved murders connected to this apothecary before stumbling on a clue that puts everyone’s lives at risk.

Her life will never be the same after this fortuitous turn of events which not everybody will survive.


3. The Silent Patient – Alex Michaelides

the silent patient by alex michaelides

If your group loves psychological thrillers and you want to read another one, then one of the most compelling books to read in a book club is The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides.

Alicia Berenson’s life appeared to be one of luxury and success. She was a renowned artist married to a prominent photographer, and they resided in a beautiful home in a coveted London neighborhood. From the outside, everything looked picture-perfect.

However, one tragic night, Alicia’s husband returned home to find her shooting him five times. After the event, the once-articulate Alicia never spoke again, transforming her act into one of London’s most prominent mysteries.

Psychotherapist Theo Faber, determined to unearth the truth about that fateful night, goes the extra mile and becomes obsessed with unraveling the enigma surrounding Alicia’s actions.

Related post: Books like The Silent Patient


4. The Great Alone – Kristin Hannah

the great alone by kristin hannah

One of the themes about Verity that were so captivating was the isolation and loneliness of Verity, who spends her days vegetable in a hospital bed, unable to interact with those around her.

Another book that shares a similar theme is The Great Alone.

Set in Alaska in 1974, the story follows Ernt Allbright who came home from the Vietnam War a different man. After he loses his job and decides to move his wife and daughter north to live off the grid in America’s last true frontier.

Cora will do anything for her husband, including following him into the unknown. Their teenage daughter, Leni, has little choice but to go along.

In this remote corner of Alaska, the Allbrights find an independent community of strong men and women whose generosity make up for the lack of preparation and resources.

As winter approaches, Ernt’s fragile mental health starts to deteriorate and the perils from outside are nothing compared to what lurks within.

In their small cabin drenched in snow, they live each day with 18 hours of night cover. Soon they are forced to realize, they’re really alone.


5. The Alice Network – Kate Quinn

the alice network by kate quinn

If you’d like something totally different from Verity, but still has mystery elements, then your group might like The Alice Network, which is a work of historical fiction about two women who work together to find out what happened to a missing person.

One of these women was a spy that was recruited for the real-life Alice Network in France during WWI, and the other was an American looking for her cousin.

The two women are brought together in a story of courage and redemption.

After the end of the Second World War, Charlie St. Clair is pregnant and unmarried, and about to be kicked out of her family.

She’s also hoping her beloved cousin Rose might still be alive. When her parents banish her to Europe, she sees an opportunity to find out what happened to her cousin.

Eve Gardiner signs up to fight against the Germans in 1915 working as a spy. There, she’s trained by Lili, the “Queen of Spies”, who introduces her to a network of secret agents.

Haunted by the betrayal, she spends her days drinking in a crumbling London house.

When an American woman asks for a name she hasn’t heard in decades, the pair work together to find out the truth. 


Final Word on Verity Book Club Questions

And that’s a wrap on my book club discussion questions for Verity by Colleen Hoover! I hope that these thought-provoking questions will help stimulate your discussion and provide you with a deeper understanding of this thrilling novel.

From analyzing the characters to dissecting the ending, there are so many fascinating topics to explore within the pages of Verity.

I’d love to hear your thoughts and opinions on the book, so feel free to share them in the comments below.

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About Louisa Smith

Editor/Founder - Epic Book Society

Louisa is the Founder, Editor, and Head Honcho of Epic Book Society. She was born and raised in the United Kingdom and graduated from the University for the Creative Arts with a degree in Journalism. Louisa began her writing career at the age of 7 when her poetry was published in an anthology of poems to celebrate the Queen's Jubilee. Upon graduating university, she spent several years working as a journalist writing about books before transitioning to become a Primary School Teacher. Louisa loves all genres of books, but her favorites are Sci-Fi, Romance, Fantasy, and Young Adult Fiction. Read more Louisa's story here.

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