The Lord of the Flies would be a good book to discuss comparison-wise with the Hunger Games. In both instances there are kids fighting for their lives in the worth of possible circumstances, but in one the kids are fighting against nature, while in the other they are fighting against their government. Ultimately, kids end up killing each other in both books, but what drives the characters to ultimately win and/or survive? and in each book, is survival deemed by which traits?
The second one is your answer
C (exaggeration) He does not really have four thousand emails
Answer:
After the stranger leaves, Elisa feels energized. She feels profoundly alive and attractive. So to make herself appear on the outside the way that she feels on the inside, she applies her normal house cleaning zeal toward herself. She bathes and shaves and scrubs herself clean.
Explanation:
The sentence that directly answers the question asked.