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Remember, Morgan has a significant speech revolving around his inability to kill his zombified wife, even as she stood before his son. Because of his hesitation, his boy is killed. Morgan says this illustrates he is one of the weak ones, those that are burdened with inheriting the Earth.
Why does connecting to and learning to live off the land become so important to Eli and eventually Morgan as well? Identity and knowing who you are is something that Morgan struggles with throughout the novel. - What kinds of things make up and impact your identity? - What has disrupted Morgan’s sense of identity?
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Morgan still doesn’t want to stay, but Eli wants to help. They argue until Morgan notices how thin Ochek is. When Ochek says he is the only hunter well enough to hunt for the village, Morgan decides to stay for a week to help.
After learning that a day in Askí is equal to an hour on Earth, Morgan agrees to stay and help for a week. Ochek leads Morgan and Eli out of town to his trapline. When they reach a canyon with only a tree bridge across it, Morgan falls off the bridge and Eli helps save her.
Morgan goes from being a reluctant member of the crew to wanting to save Misewa, highlighting her turn from viewing others with suspicion and protecting herself at all costs to risking her own life for those she cares about.
336 votes, 111 comments. I need thoughts on Kylee racing up to Blake’s vehicle and begging him not to leave. Why, if she’s with Aven, is she saying…
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After reading the D.C comics, I want to understand Blake more and where she comes from. She and people in the fandom keep pointing to her leaving the team at the end of Volume 3 as her biggest mistake. However, I don't really get WHY it was so terrible.