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Virginia Euwer WolffA 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.
Jolly, who never takes drugs, implies that a drug addiction may have contributed to her sleeping with her babies’ fathers. She says, “‘You go smoking that drug […] You end up pregnant/because some guy has some nice high for you’” (154). A few weeks later, when Jolly mentions she once had a “gram” (154), LaVaughn assumes she means drugs—but she actually means a foster mother. Jolly says her Gram cared for her, but that she’s dead now. One of Gram’s previous foster children, now a grown-up, often came back to visit and rototill Gram’s garden. The man’s name was Jeremy, and Jolly named her son after him.
Jolly explains rototilling to LaVaughn: “‘It turns the soil […] You have to rototill. Otherwise nothing grows’” (157). Jolly also remembers how her Gram had a “‘family-tree T-shirt’” (158) with all her foster kids’ names on it, including Jolly’s, and she says how the adult Jeremy was “‘the nicest man’” (158). LaVaughn is surprised to learn that in a way, Jolly did have “folks” (159), but after this brief revelation, Jolly “never says anything more” about them, “ever again” (159).
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