Answer:
As soon as she arrived she went straight to the kitchen to see if the monkey was there. It was,
what a relief! She wouldn't have liked to admit that her Mother had been right. Monkeys at a birthday?
Her mother had sneered.
“Get away with you, believing any nonsense you're told!” She was cross, but not because of the
monkey, the girl thought; it's just because of the party.
"I don't like you going," she told her. "It's a rich people's party."
"Rich people go to Heaven too," said the girl, who studied religion at school.
"Get away with Heaven," said the mother.
"I’m going because I’ve been invited," she said. "And I’ve been invited because Luciana is my friend.
Explanation:
This is the excerpt that Claudius tells Laertes of his plan to ensure hamlets death:
<span>Good Laertes, If you desire to know the certainty Of your dear father's death, is't writ in your revenge, That, swoopstake, you will draw both friend and foe, Winner and loser? (Hamlet Act IV, Scene V)
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What is there to choose from?
Answer:
The reader needs to connect with the character. When a reader emotionally connects with the character, he gets engaged and interested in the story.
Explanation:
If the reader knows the action of the story he will get more involved in resolving the end, by guessing or assuming.
If there isn’t an action that is noticed in the story, or that is unfamiliar to the reader, the reader can get bored and lose interest in the story.