What was the main problem in the story locomotion
Answers
When Lonnie Collins Motion "Locomotion" was seven years old, his life changed forever. Now he's eleven, and his life is about to change again. His teacher, Ms. Marcus, is showing him ways to put his jumbled feelings on paper. And suddenly, Lonnie has a whole new way to tell the world about his life, his friends, his little sister Lili, and even his foster mom, Miss Edna, who started out crabby but isn’t so bad after all. Jacqueline Woodson’s novel-in-poems is humorous, heartbreaking a triumph.
Since his parents died, eleven year-old Lonnie Motion has had to adjust to many changes in his life: living with his new foster mother, attending a new school, and coping with being separated from his little sister Lili, who lives with her new mother. Miss Edna, Lonnie's new foster mother, seems uncomfortable with the noise and energy Lonnie brings to their small apartment, and she is constantly telling him, "Hush, Lonnie." At school, Lonnie has to find a way to relate to students who don't know him or his background. Through his transition, Lonnie is comforted by memories from his past when his parents were alive, by visits with Lili in her new home, and also by the encouragement of his teacher, Ms. Marcus. Through Ms. Marcus, Lonnie finds a way to express himself in his writing. In a series of poems, Lonnie begins to remember his past, to record his grief, and to cope with his future. In the end, Lonnie comes to accept his new life, and to appreciate the people who support him, especially Ms. Marcus, Miss Edna, Miss Edna's grown son Rodney, and his sister Lili.
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