WHAT is this referring to? A book or a movie ?
Try D. because as it tells no information about the person speaking first person. im amazed you got to read a Stephen king excerpt though!!
The story is in the form of several separate myths that are largely independent of each other. Different parts of the story involve different characters. Each part of the story explains how something in the world came to be. The fact that this is an oral story also might have influenced the story’s structure over time. Different speakers may have added or removed information from the story when it was spoken. This idea might explain why the story feels somewhat disjointed, particularly when compared to a written story, which typically doesn’t change over time.
hope this helps :p
The correct answer is C. The purpose of an argument is to determine the degree of truth of another statement which is the conclusion. The objective of an explanation is describe facts. Statement C's use of the words <em>evidence </em>and <em>fact</em> suggests that reasons are given to support the statement. The other statements simply describe events and facts, with no support for the claims mentioned.
Setting is more than simply a geographical location or time period that serves as a backdrop to characters’ actions. Fictional settings have many uses:
The places you set your scenes contribute mood and tone (a dark, eerie wood creates a very different sense of danger or mystery compared to a bright, open plain)
Places restrict (or open) possibilities for your characters’ lives and actions (a character living in a small mining town might have very different perceptions and options compared to a character who lives in a large city)
Places can evolve and change as your story progresses. You can use their evolution to show the changing circumstances affecting your characters’ views and options (for example, in Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh, the narrator visits a grand manor he knew in his youth. He finds it crumbling due to the onslaught of the war. This creates melancholic nostalgia. Waugh uses changing physical setting to convey the idea of loss.)