Answer:
am / is / are + past participle (3rd form of the verb).
Explanation:
In the present simple, the passive is: am / is / are + past participle (3rd form of the verb). Remember! The past participle always stays the same.
They are read now because the books he made were mostly romance and drama and ere one of a kind
Peggy Cort is a lonely spinster librarian living on 1950s Cape Cod when an unusual young boy comes into her libarary. He is James Sweatt and he is already taller than any boys in his school and growing at a rapid rate. The book covers the slow friendship that develops between Peggy and James the Giant. Peggy is there when James gets injured, when his mother dies and when he travels.
Peggy realizes about halfway through the book that she is in love with the young giant but doesn't quite know what to do with her emotions. She helps his family build him a giant-sized cottage behind their house. She tries to set him up with a girl his own age as a teenager but eventually his friends grow up and leave and he is left with Peggy as his primary friend to help him deal with the tourists and gawkers who come to see the boy who won't stop growing.
When he is over eight feet tall and nineteen the two go to New York City to participate in the circus. While they are there he meets the smallest woman in the world who talks to him of marriage and he asks Peggy if she wants to get married. They talk about it but nothing comes of it and after they return, although they have declared their love for each other it is too late and the giant is already becoming sicker and dies soon after.
The conversation between Lady Macduff and her son is comedic because he provides a commentary on her life that is far beyond his years. His mother's surprise at his bluntness, when he turns the conversation around onto her (she says "what wilt thou do for a father?" and he replies "nay how will you do for a husband") she is surprised and the mood is lightened a bit from their worry and anger about Macduff's leaving. The boy is witty and bold, which makes his mother (and the audience) laugh.