87 pages • 2 hours read
Andrea Davis PinkneyA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
This section covers Chapter 113: “New Neighbor,” Chapter 114: “Withering,” Chapter 115: “Sad-Quiet,” Chapter 116: “Fences,” Chapter 117: “Blocked,” Chapter 118: “No Blue Boundaries,” Chapter 119: “Awakened,” Chapter 120: “Drenched,” Chapter 121: “Listening,” Chapter 122: “Freeing Muma,” Chapter 123: “Release,” Chapter 124: “Healing,” Chapter 125: “Could It Be?”, and Chapter 126: “Roar!”.
Amira notices the group’s new neighbor, a small creature that waddles between houses. She has never seen an animal like it on the farm and learns from Old Anwar that it is called a hedgehog.
Amira notices that her once-strong Muma is beginning to “[shrivel], / like a dried-up hibiscus flower” (204). She is beginning to stoop, with nothing to reach for her at Kalma. The novel’s accompanying illustration shows a drooping hibiscus flower. Leila composes a new ditty about Amira’s lost voice, proclaiming that Amira’s “sad-quiet” makes Leila “sad-quiet,” too.
Amira wonders why there are blue lines on her yellow paper, likening them to “ugly wire fences / preventing / [her] pencil / from roaming” (206). The sparrow inside her feels trapped behind these “blue barricades” when she tries to draw.
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