They are the author's memories and impressions with the man he based Life of Pi off of. If you read the introduction(which is all in italics) he talks about how he came to write the book, and one thing the author mentions is the first meeting of real-life Piscine. So while the story is going on, the author adds in his thoughts on the main character.
I believe the answer is B. A pair of consecutive rhyming lines.
Answer:
Three mixed-race girls are torn brutally from their Aboriginal mother and sent over a thousand miles away to a training camp for domestic workers as part of a government policy to integrate them into white society. Linking the camp and their distant home territory is a vast rabbit-proof fence, which stretches from one coast to another and just might help the girls find their way back.
Answer:
His mentioning that community and individualism are constantly at odds "supports Quindlen's key metaphor: we are a multicultural nation of diverse ethnicity, but we are unified as one people under one government."
Explanation: