CENTRAL THEMES connected and noted throughout this Teaching Guide:
- Acceleration and Imprisonment
- Second Chances and Cycles of Poverty and Violence
- Guilt, Forgiveness, and Absolution
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Teaching Guide, students will:
- Gain an understanding of the psychological context around serial killers’ aberrant behavior, along with a discussion of POV as a literary device, both of which shape the narrative through Duncan’s pursuit of Roach.
- Study paired texts and other brief resources to make connections via the text’s themes of Acceleration and Imprisonment, Second Chances and Cycles of Poverty and Violence, and Guilt, Forgiveness, and Absolution.
- Collaborate in small groups to read, research, and present sketches of students’ own investigative journalism, based on mysteries and/or cases in their own communities—emulating and based around work similar to Duncan’s in the novel.
- Analyze and evaluate plot and character details to draw conclusions in structured essay responses regarding the function of prisons in the novel, Duncan’s relationship with his mother, and other topics.