The correct answer as to how Margaret Atwood transforms source material in the Penelopiad is the second choice:
Penelope explains that she recognizes Odysseus immediately
Once Odysseus has returned from his long voyage, his wife Penelope recognizes her husband immediately, although in Homer's version she does not. Atwood's The Penelopiad is a retelling of a classic ancient Greek epic poem Odyssey.
The narrator.
The passage never gives the narrator a name, or refers to himself in any given name.
Answer:
Annabeth warns Percy that's he's got to walk the walk and talk the talk if he's going to do well at Camp Half-Blood.
Explanation:
i read a lot of percy jackson its one of my favorite book seris
Answer: A. Hawthorne is giving a lesson Franklin learned that readers might also profit from
Explanation:
Hawthorne is obviously not giving his own thoughts, since Franklin said this and it is a quote. He also cannot be trying to get young readers to relate because there is nothing in the excerpt about being a boy. Franklin probably had some experience and learned this lesson from it.
This is true. The line "Fainting I follow, I leave off therefore" contains both a caesura and alliteration that are each offset by the other--contributing to the power of both.