1. The worst thing about being poor, (according to Junior's opinion), is that his family doesn't have enough money to take his dog, Oscar, to the vet.
"He’s really sick, Mom,” I said. “He’s going to die if we don’t take him to the doctor.”
She looked hard at me. And her eyes weren’t dark anymore, so I knew that she was going to tell me the truth. And trust me, there are times when the last thing you want to hear is the truth. “Junior, sweetheart,” Mom said. “I’m sorry, but we don’t have any money for Oscar.”
2.
3. Junior got very angry at his Dad, because his Mom and Dad made a decision without him, even though it included HIS beloved pet, Oscar.
"Then Dad came home from wherever and had one of those long talks with Mom, and they decided something without me. And then Dad pulled down his rifle and bullets from the closet."
It would be D) because that one makes more scene.
This question is asking YOU if you believe so. Personally, I do believe that people can change completely in regards of their behaviour or in regards with their say/perspective on life/things in general.
Answer: Pankaj Mishra’s first novel in two decades, Run and Hide, is a Bildungsroman tale of three young men who come of age around the time when India’s economy is beginning to open up to the larger world. Arun, our narrator, is a small-town boy. His father makes a meager living selling snacks on a railway platform. But his family’s financial sacrifices pay off when Arun gains admission to the prestigious Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi.
Explanation: