Answer:
A Place Where The Sea Remembers An offering by Sandra Benitez ‚ A Place Where the Sea Remembers is a tale of love and anger‚ hope and tragedy‚ filled with haunting characters. Its setting is the Mexican village of Santiago‚ where Remedios‚ the healer‚ listens to the peoples’ stories and gives them advice.
Answer : The sentences from the excerpt that seems to foreshadow Dexter’s future obsession with “possessing” Judy Jones is -
"He wanted not association with glittering things and glittering people—he wanted the glittering things themselves. Often he reached out for the best without knowing why he wanted it—and sometimes he ran up against the mysterious denials and prohibitions in which life indulges."
Where it is clearly seen that he wants all the best things that was available without the answers of why he wanted them. He always wanted best things or him.
No! Living there would be a nightmare for me, I'm what you would call "mixed." In the book you're reading the towns folk believe in segregation and punish those unjustly because of the color of their skin. It's also a very poor part of Alabama based on the description so schools would be awful, neighborhoods might be riddled with crime, and community resources would be very limited or non-existent (community centers, parks, hospitals, etc).
As for the second half, it was absolutely cruel. The parents should have kept a better eye on their children and reprimanded them for being so inconsiderate. They should have also educated them on letting other people just be since we're all different, with our own challenges.
Thinking about Grendel, I think 'A' is most likely.
<span>1 Unlike other prisoners, the men in Span One felt no Guilt
</span>2 Brille worked as a Teacher before going to prison.
3 Brille thinks of Hannetjie as <span>Child
4 </span>The servant could only cower before the powerful king.
Cringe
hope it helps