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    • Doesn't hate Holling at all

      • During her Wednesday afternoons with Holling, Mrs. Baker manages to pass on her love of Shakespeare to him. Over time, Mrs. Baker demonstrates that she doesn't hate Holling at all and, in fact, eventually becomes a parental figure for him.
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  2. Oct 4, 2024 · Despite Hoilling's perceptions, Mrs. Baker does not hate Holling and soon even he knows it. Two significant events that happen in the novel that do have an impact on their relationship,...

  3. Holling believes that Mrs. Baker hates him because he's the only Presbyterian student and therefore, he spends his Wednesday afternoons with her alone instead of attending religious study like his Jewish and Catholic classmates.

  4. He doesn't complain, especially since in early October, his dad becomes one of two candidates for the Baker Sporting Emporium remodel, and he reminds Holling nightly to not make Mrs. Baker hate him.

  5. Oct 3, 2024 · Holling is under direct orders from his dad to do everything possible to make sure that Mrs. Baker doesn't hate Holling or Holling's family.

  6. Holling argues that, as the antagonist, he does not, but Mrs. Baker muses whether Shakespeare might have shown, even in a monster, the capacity of humankind to use defeat to grow.

  7. Analysis. Holling Hoodhood tells the reader that his teacher, Mrs. Baker, hates him with a burning passion—for absolutely no reason. He says it would've made sense if she'd hated Doug Swieteck, as he once made a list of 410 ways to get a teacher to hate you.

  8. Holling Hoodhood, a seventh grader at Camillo Junior High in Long Island, NY, begins the school year convinced that Mrs. Baker hates him. Doug Swieteck, Holling’s mischievous classmate, is the kid whom most teachers hate, because he has an entire list of ways (410 ways, to be exact) to earn the hate of a teacher.