Answer:
Invitation On A Tour To Goa
Explanation:
Students are very much invited on this tour. During the tour we are going to visit many educative and entertaining places in Goa which should encourage you to also come and have fun and learn.
We never see Amir's mother in the novel, but nonetheless she exerts an influence. Baba perhaps blames Amir for her sudden death (she dies giving birth to Amir). In a way, she's the wedge between Baba and Amir. As Baba pushes Amir more and more toward "manly" activities like soccer and kite-flying, Amir resists by reading his mother's poetry books. She also has books on the Hazara people, which suggests that she, like Rahim Khan, has some of the most forward-thinking and compassionate views on ethnicity in the novel. It's odd how Amir's mother "feminizes" him even though she's almost completely absent. In fact, we have to disagree with Amir when he later says "I had been raised by men; I hadn't grown up around women" (13.97). Like Rahim Khan, who also encourages Amir's writing, Amir's mother has been there all along with him.
Answer:
The setting is a dry desolate place, it presents the idea that there might have once been a lake there but it dried up. It also suggests an off putting or misleading title, the name has no relation to the actual place so it almost makes you question the origins of the camp.