If you were drawing a picture of the dynamics among Robby’s mother, father, and Pauline, what would it look like?
Chapter 9: Atlanta
What are your impressions of Pauline and the rest of Robby’s Atlanta family?
Nola hoped and prayed that Robby would be rescued like the fictional character, Oliver Twist. What did she want to happen? How would you have prayed for Robby at this point?
Chapter 10: Is There Room?
How did you feel when, “like a mama bear who knows it’s time to leave her cub behind to fend for itself, [Nola] turned and walked away”? Has anything like that happened to you, either as a child or a parent? If so, what was the result?
How did “the loud silence [that] said everything I didn’t want to hear” apply to Robby? Have you ever experienced such a silence? If so, how did you respond?
Chapter 11: Why?
The chapter ends with, “the fire of my rage burned hotter than ever.” Without considering the rest of the book, where would you predict the author would end up as a teenager and an adult? Why?
Chapter 12: Earning Power
Robby decided that “money was going to save [him].” Do you think this attitude is common in our culture?
What do you think of the author’s investment choices? What do they tell you about his values at that point?
What aspects of Booker T. Washington’s point of view did Robby accept? What did he reject?
Chapter 13: Reunion
How did you feel about Mother in the restaurant scene?
What moved Robby to hold his mother’s hand? How did you react to that moment? Why?
The author writes, “the lion of my anger shredded the lamb of my sympathy.” Have you ever experienced a similar struggle? Has your “lamb” ever overcome your “lion”? What have you learned from these battles?
Chapter 14: A Few Good Men
What did you think of the men who tried to positively influence Robby? In what ways were they ordinary? How were they special?
Why do fatherless boys and motherless girls need mentors? What mentoring opportunities exist in your community?
Robby asked Marv a question, but refused to believe the answer. What was the question, and why couldn’t Robby accept the answer?
Chapter 15: The Rebel
What was going on inside Robby that the “ordinary” or “regular” kids didn’t understand?
What hurts might be felt by the people around you in your neighborhood, in church, on the job, or in school that you wouldn’t know about? What first step could you take toward understanding?