61 pages • 2 hours read
Lois LowryA 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.
Reading Check and Short Answer Questions on key points are designed for guided reading assignments, in-class review, formative assessment, quizzes, and more.
PROLOGUE-CHAPTER 3
Reading Check
1. What profession did Katy “Docky” Thatcher know she wanted to have from the age of 13?
2. What is the name of the Thatchers’ private cook, whom Peggy is hired to assist?
3. In Chapter 3, Katy’s father heads to Schuyler’s Mill to treat a worker with what injury?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What object does Docky, mistakenly, think is called a “mazing”? Why does she believe this?
2. Who is “Evangeline Emerson”?
Paired Resource
“The Secret is There Are No Secrets: An Interview with Lois Lowry”
CHAPTERS 4-7
Reading Check
1. On the snow day in Chapter 5, Jessie Wood brings what toy to share among the children?
2. In Chapter 6, Katy reminisces about playing on the beach and seeing fireworks on what holiday?
3. From what book does Katy’s father read at the opening of Chapter 7?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. When Peggy tells Katy about the kind of work Jacob does on the farm, why does Katy find this information both confusing and upsetting?
2. What superstition does Peggy believe about babies born with a “mark”?
Paired Resource
“The History of Child Labor in America”
CHAPTERS 8-10
Reading Check
1. Why is Katy’s father called to the asylum in Chapter 8?
2. In what city does Katy’s grandmother live?
3. Who is revealed to be a romantic admirer of Katy in Chapter 10?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What happens during Katy and Austin’s made-up game called “Tragedy and Disaster”? What does this game say about the nature of their friendship?
2. Why are Nell and Paul forbidden from dating?
Paired Resource
“History of Psychiatric Hospitals”
CHAPTERS 11-13
Reading Check
1. What is the word game that Katy and Peggy play at the opening of Chapter 11?
2. What article of clothing does Katy usually see Jacob wearing?
3. Mrs. Bishop and Katy’s mother both think that Mr. Bishop is foolish for purchasing what expensive item?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What causes Katy, as described in Chapter 11, to suddenly decide she does not like Paul?
2. In Chapter 12, what happens that causes Jessie to wonder why Katy would consider Jacob her friend?
Paired Resource
“Women’s Suffrage in the Progressive Era”
CHAPTERS 14-16
Reading Check
1. What is the name of Katy’s third grade teacher?
2. What does Katy give as party favors for her 9th birthday party?
3. In Chapter 15, Katy awakens in the middle of the night to her father making a phone call, which strikes her as unusual. Who is her father calling?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does Katy’s tone change in this section of the novel? What does this indicate, in terms of the book’s larger themes?
2. Why does Katy defend Jacob after the death of Nellie’s baby? What does she believe is the truth of what happened?
CHAPTERS 17-20
Reading Check
1. In Chapter 18, a family friend thinks they spy Nellie bartending in what city?
2. How many children do Peggy and Floyd end up having?
3. Katy and Austin’s parents buy them what property as a wedding gift?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. Chapter 17 is a summary of Paul’s life after boarding school. What happens to him?
2. How does the ending of the novel, particularly for Katy and Peggy, question the rigidity of social roles?
Recommended Next Reads
The Giver by Lois Lowry
Number the Stars by Lois Lowry
PROLOGUE-CHAPTER 3
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. Docky mistakenly thinks Austin’s go-cart is called a “mazing.” She thinks this because she overhears her mother calling the go-cart “amazing.” (Chapter 1)
2. It is the name that Nell has selected as her stage name, which she hopes to someday use when she becomes a film star. (Chapter 2)
CHAPTERS 4-7
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. Peggy tells Katy that Jacob must sometimes kill kittens, as part of his duties on the farm. This confuses Katy because she thinks of him as a soft, sweet boy—one who is good and kind to animals. (Chapter 4)
2. Peggy believes that if a pregnant mother hears distressing news, the baby will be born “damaged.” She tells Katy that birthmarks are the result of a pregnant mother seeing something horrifying. (Chapter 7)
CHAPTERS 8-10
Reading Check
1. To treat a patient’s stomachache (Chapter 8)
2. Cincinnati (Chapter 9)
3. Floyd Lehman (Chapter 10)
Short Answer
1. In the imagination game, Katy and Austin will act out tragedies and disasters, including things like shipwrecks and the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. Austin and Katy get lost in their games together; this shows they have a very strong friendship based on shared interests and big imaginations. (Chapter 9)
2. They are from different economic classes: Nell is considered low-class and Paul has a higher social standing. Mingling between rich and poor in that way is frowned upon in society. (Chapter 10)
CHAPTERS 11-13
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. Katy recalls stumbling upon Paul and Nell in the barn together. She knew that what they were doing was romantic, but only in retrospect did she realize they were likely having intercourse. Upon making that realization, she decides she does not like Paul. (Chapter 11)
2. On the ride to Mrs. Shafer’s, Katy and Jessie pass Jacob while he is working in the field. Katy tells Jessie that Jacob is her friend; however, when Katy waves at him, Jacob doesn’t wave back or say hello. Based on his non-reaction, Jessie wonders why Katy considers him a friend. (Chapter 12)
CHAPTERS 14-16
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. Katy’s tone seems less childlike in this section of the novel. Her voice matures. It is as if she views this dark, difficult period from an adult’s consciousness; it emphasizes the traumatic nature of the death of Nellie’s baby. (Chapters 14-16)
2. Katy knows that, at his core, Jacob is a good boy. He meant no harm. Katy believes that Jacob did not mean to kill the child; he brought it to Mary’s nursery to attempt to have Mrs. Thatcher care for the rejected child. (Chapter 16)
CHAPTERS 17-20
Reading Check
Short Answer
1. After graduating from boarding school, he goes to Princeton and then law school. During WWI, he joins the Marines and is killed in battle outside of Paris (Chapter 17)
2. Katy defies her role as a woman. She sets out to do everything she aspires to, rather than limiting herself to being solely a mother or a doctor. She accomplishes everything she dreamed of as a girl: marrying her love, becoming a doctor, traveling, and having children and grandchildren. Meanwhile, Peggy finds similar success as she creates the life she dreamed of as a young girl. (Chapters 17-20)
By Lois Lowry