89 pages • 2 hours read
Mary Doria RussellA 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.
Jimmy Quinn’s proposal to his boss is accepted, and Sofia Mendes is hired to be Jimmy’s vulture. Sofia’s broker agreed to the proposal because “[i]f she won, her broker was to receive three times her normal fee, enough to clear her debt. If she lost, ISAS could accept the program with its limitations known, but pay nothing” (74). Sofia isn’t happy about the deal, as she doesn’t want to get her hopes up regarding the prospect of being free. She had “survived because, by heritage and experience, she knew how to see reality unclouded by emotion. It was a talent that had served her family well for centuries” (74).
Sofia thinks back to being 13 in Istanbul, when the country “began tearing itself to rubble in the insanity that grew out of the Second Kurdish War” (75). Sofia’s mother, a musician, died in a random shooting, and her father, an economist, went missing shortly after, never to be seen again. With no way out of the war-ravaged city, she found herself in the world of commercial sexual exploitation of children. Her “clients were mostly half-grown boys crazed with violence and men who might have been decent husbands and good fathers once but were now militiamen in a hundred vicious factions” (76).
By Mary Doria Russell