![]() ![]() Quentin ends the prologue by noting that Margo always loved mysteries, maybe "so much that she became one" (p.8). In her own words, young Margo poses that "Maybe all the strings inside him broke" (p.8). They told Margo that Robert Joyner was sad about getting divorced and so he shot himself with a gun. Though Quentin convinced young Margo to go back home, where they separated and Quentin’s psychologist parents coached him through the experience calmly, Margo developed a fascination with the case and investigated it by asking two women from the neighborhood questions about the man's death. Once, at age nine, they biked to the park and found a dead man leaning against a tree. ![]() Since they grew up next door to one another in Orlando, Florida (specifically, in a subdivision called Jefferson park) from the age of two on, they were good friends as children. ![]() Quentin sees Margo Roth Spiegelman as the miracle of his life. ![]()
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