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Niamh Ryan
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Part of our series on Anita and Me, this comprehensive study note summarises chapter by chapter each of the 13 chapters in the book. It provides a summary of the main events, analysis and key quotes. This is the ideal study resource to start learning to story of Anita and Me.

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Niamh Ryan
Created by Niamh Ryan almost 8 years ago
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8/13
Chapter 8

Plot summary

Nanima comes to their home and receives a hero’s welcome.

During the party, Meena sees Anita’s mother Deirdre get out of a car.  Whatever she says to the waiting Anita deeply upsets her, as she runs crying into the house.

Meena begins to feel more at home with her brother and at ease with her identity after Nanima arrives.

Deirdre comes into their house and confronts Mama – she accuses her of stopping Meena from seeing Anita.

Meena stands up for her grandmother when she thinks that Mr Ormerod has given her the wrong change.  However, she is embarrassed to realise that the reason she is short of money is because her mother bought an additional chocolate bar.

On the way home from the shop they encounter Uncle Alan, who is speaking to Sam Lowbridge about blame and responsibility.  Meena feels a deep hatred towards Sam because of what he said at the fete.

Quotes and analysis

“It felt so strange to hear Punjabi under the stars.  It was an indoor language to me, an almost guilty secret which the Elders would only share away from prying English eyes and ears”

         Nanima’s visit has inspired all the Elders with a surge of pride.  Even though she is not their relative, she represents home and her presence          makes them feel like they belong again.

“Before Nanima arrived, this urge to reinvent myself, I could now see was driven purely by shame”

         Nanima helps Meena to embrace her differences.  Before Nanima saw them as something to be ashamed of.  However, Nanima represents          something exotic and exciting and Meena realises that her Indian roots are also something exotic, something to be proud of.

“But now those two words took on an ominous significance; this was no longer a mere exam.  If I failed, my parents’ five thousand mile journey would have been for nothing”

        Suddenly Meena feels the burden of the sacrifice that her parents have made on her behalf.