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  1. I’ve noticed that it’s common in movies for a person we like to do terrible things for a long time, and while they are not convicted and punished by law, they do have a redemption arc. Basically, they atone for their wrongs and are reformed. Which, isn’t that the point of prison? Reformation? But we don’t think this way about real life. Like, at all. If someone robbed people for 26 years in real life and then called themselves changed, we’d laugh and send them to prison. Sounds like this book could become a movie!

    1. Well and basically this character does bad things but feels bad about it at the same time, which is why we feel bad for her…but you are right, in real life, we wouldn’t feel bad for a longtime criminal, if they felt guilty all the time

  2. Hmm, I’d have difficulty empathising with her once she was grown-up, I suspect! It reminds me of an ancient film – starring Ryan and Tatum O’Neal when Tatum was about eight or nine, I think, called Paper Moon, where they play a father and daughter con-trick team.

  3. I know what you mean about the extra nudge that a public, group reading of a book being what it takes to get a book from “maybe’ to “right now.” That’s happened to me with many a Canada Reads title, even though it’s been several years since I followed that programming on CBC.

    1. Same here, I won’t follow the actually show but I”ll pick up more Canada Reads books because of it

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