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Callum is an alternative ending to Noughts and Crosses and was published for World Book Day 2012. Callum decides to let Sephy flee from the other kidnappers while they are out. While he shows her the way back to town, Sephy badly injures her foot and Callum then talks her into spending the night with him in an abandoned shack for her to recover.
The series is set in an alternative history where black "Cross" people rule over white "Noughts". The first episode aired on BBC One on 5 March 2020, [1] and the remaining episodes premiered on BBC iPlayer on the same day. [2] In May 2021, the BBC announced that a second series had been commissioned. [3] The series differs from the book in ...
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At the time of the series, slavery had been abolished for some time, but segregation, similar to the Jim Crow Laws, continues to operate to keep the "Crosses" (dark-skinned people) in control of the "noughts" (lighter-skinned people). An international organisation, the Pangaean Economic Community, exists.
Malorie Blackman was born on 8 February 1962 [2] in Merton, London, and grew up in Lewisham, one of 5 siblings.Her parents were both from Barbados and had come to Britain as part of the "Windrush generation"; her father Joe was a bus driver and her mother Ruby worked in a pyjama factory. [3]