![]() ![]() How does the irony of this designation grow as the novel goes on? What does Hailsham represent for Kathy, and why does she say at the end that Hailsham is "something no one can take away" (page 287)?Ĥ. Why is it important for Kathy to seek out donors who are "from the past," "people from Hailsham" (page 5)? She learns from a donor who'd grown up at an awful place in Dorset that she and her friends at Hailsham had been really "lucky" (page 6). What does Kathy assume about anyone she might be addressing, and why?ģ. Kathy addresses us directly, with statements like "I don't know how it was where you were, but at Hailsham we used to have some form of medical every week" (page 13), and she thinks that we too might envy her having been at Hailsham (page 4). How long does it take for the meaning of such terms as "donation," "carer," and "completed" to be fully revealed?Ģ. She prides herself on knowing how to keep her donors calm, "even before fourth donation" (page 3). ![]() Kathy introduces herself as an experienced carer. ![]()
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