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Multiple Choice
1. B (Chapter 1)
2. A (Chapter 4)
3. C (Chapter 5)
4. D (Chapter 10)
5. B (Chapter 12)
6. B (Chapter 13)
7. A (Chapter 20)
8. D (Chapter 25)
9. A (Chapter 28)
10. C (Chapter 30)
11. A (Chapter 33)
12. A (Chapter 35)
13. B (Chapter 37)
14. C (Chapter 40)
15. B (Chapters 40-41)
Long Answer
1. Kelsea suffers from mental illness, specifically depression, and A realizes that it is not a choice. It is partially the result of the body’s chemistry, and partially the result of a person’s history. As when A inhabited the drug-addicted person, A realizes that certain people are trapped by their body’s chemistry/personal history and are therefore closed off to the “enormity” that A experienced with Rhiannon at the beach. (Chapters 10-12)
2. A thinks about how they could commit the perfect crime in the body of someone else. They could do the crime while in that body, and saddle that person with the blame.
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By David Levithan