Coloring different countries different color is good because you would memorize the colors and it wouldn’t have to take a long time for you to find the countries you’re looking for. Idk if this makes sense but ye
<span>The best answer here is D. Instead of drawing meaning or inspiration from the imagined heaven of Christianity, humanists are inclined to believe that life on earth is important in its own right. </span>
The novel's perspective switches to Auggie's older sister, Via, who begins by talking about how she has gotten used to how her entire family life revolves around Auggie and his needs. She says that she does not mind this situation because she is used to it, though such a setup has meant that she and her own needs and problems often take second place. Although Via doesn't remember what her life was like before Auggie was born, she can see from photographs how much attention she got back then. She notes, though, that this year things have started to change.
Via talks about how she never saw Auggie the way other people see him -- could never understand the horror and fright on their faces when they first encountered him. Her perceptions changed for a moment after she spent a month with her grandmother in Montauk; upon coming back home after those weeks away, she saw Auggie, for just a second, the way other people did. Via muses that the only person she could have talked to about the way she felt was Grans. Unfortunately, two months after Via's return, Grans died of a heart attack. This loss devastated Via, because she had a very special relationship with her grandmother, who secretly told Via that she loved her more than anyone else in the world -- even Auggie -- because Via needed an angel looking out for her too.
As for the setting of the story, it was fluid, making it very a pleasant reading experience. The plot was fairly well structured, so much that when I completed one chapter I ". . planned to read another." The final quote in<em> </em>the<em> </em><em>The Incident of the Letter</em> : "Henry Jekyll foraged for a murder and his blood ran cold" (pg37). This quote contains a certain suspenseful tone that makes me wish there was more to the story after that. That final line made me appreciate both the plot and the setting for what it was. Throughout the story, we are given little hints that are completely unexpected; and it keeps the reader on the edge of their seat the entire time. What surprised me the most was when Landon retold his own side of the situation in the letter, because I suspected Hyde drank the potion in front of Landon. Instead Landon discovered Jekyll's secret without him wanting to. This was a fantastic plot twist the author threw at me.