<span>In "The Californian's Tale," Twain implements sensory details such as hearing, sight, and sound when describing the narrator entering Henry's cabin. For example, when Twain writes, "not a sound in all those peaceful expanses of grass and woods but the drowsy hum of insects," he is using the sensory detail of hearing.</span>
This month, Professor Gill Plain talks about Literature of the 1940s: ... What are the salient characteristics of the period? ... That comes from a very strange novel called The Holiday, which she wrote during, and about, the war