<em>The aspects of a story that best help the reader understand the author, I think, are imagery, repetition, and tone. These three help make the thoughts of the author concrete and understandable. Even more so than imagery and repetition, tone is often known and noted to be very important in understanding the author's purposes. </em>
<em>Plot and setting have more to do with characters than with the author's intentions, although they still do.</em>
<em>-Toremi</em>
Answer:
I believe the answer is Paragraph 2!
Explanation:
Let me know if this is wrong.
1. The blacks believe they have everything handed to them and they never have to lift a finger for anything’s because they are well educated and well dressed, example would be that the narrator mugs a white man and to get the other man to help me lies and says that the white men don’t care about uneducated poor black men.
2. No because the man was just doing it because he was starving and needed food before he died so he was willing to do anything. At the end he ended up not even getting any money for food because he was tricked and lied too. Most likely he blames the narrator because he lies to him and tricks him. The narrator does it out of selfishness because he has learned his way around things because of how long he’s been on the streets.
Answer:
i would say D just to be polite
Explanation: