91 pages • 3 hours read
Caitlin Alifirenka, Liz Welch, Martin GandaA 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.
Summary
“Caitlin: September 1997”-“Martin: November 1997”
“Caitlin: January 1998”-“Caitlin: May 1998”
“Martin: June 1998”-“Martin: October 1998”
“Caitlin: December 1998”-“Martin: April 1999”
“Caitlin: May 1999”-“Caitlin: June 1999”
“Martin: June 1999”-“Caitlin: December 1999”
“Martin: January 2000”-“Caitlin: February 2000”
“Martin: February 2000”-“Caitlin: September 2000”
“Martin: November 2000”-“Caitlin: December 2000”
“Martin: January 2001”-“Martin: April 2001”
“Caitlin: April 2001”-“Martin: July 2001”
“Caitlin: September 2001”-“Martin: June 2002”
“Caitlin: August 2002”-“Martin: September 2002”
“Caitlin: October 2002”-“Martin: December 2002”
“Caitlin: January 2003”-“Martin: April 2003”
“Caitlin: April 2003”-“Caitlin: July 2003”
“Martin–July 2003”-“Martin–August 14, 2003”
“Caitlin: August 15, 2003”-“Caitlin: October 2015”
Key Figures
Themes
Symbols & Motifs
Important Quotes
Essay Topics
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
When Martin receives Caitlin’s letter, he is surprised to find two $20 bills enclosed. Layoffs continue to grow worse at his father’s job, so Martin’s family is grateful to have Caitlin’s money to help them. In July, Martin’s father’s paycheck can no longer cover the month’s rent, so they turn to Caitlin’s money to make up the remaining amount.
Meanwhile, Martin continues to try to catch up with his lessons at school, taking as many as nine classes. One winter break, Martin stays with his uncle in Harare so that he can work as a teaboy at the bank where his cousin’s husband was employed. When he meets his cousin, Sekai, and her husband, Alois, at a coffee shop, he is in awe of the fast-paced city life, which is very different from Mutare. Sekai and Alois tell Martin that he is very clever. They advise him, “Keep your grades up and go on to your A-levels so you can go to university like we did. Then you can do whatever you want” (127). With the money that Martin earns as a teaboy, he buys a card for Caitlin, thanking her for her friendship.
When Martin returns home to Mutare from his uncle’s place that winter break, he discovers that his father has lost his job.