Answer:
d. Make readers hungry for answers
Explanation:
Lee Child wrote this interesting article in order to answer the same old question "How to create a suspense?".
According to him, the conclusion can be drawn from an analogy between creating a suspense and baking a cake.
Surely, for both of those things you need ingredients and they need to be adequately mixed, but the answer, Lee, suggests, is much simpler: the cake doesn't matter, all that matters is that your family members are hungry.
By using this analogy, he claims that successful suspense is created by making the readers/viewers constantly oblivious as to what will happen next. Anticipation will glue them to the book, making them flip the pages vigorously in search for answers and resolution.
D: to stop smoking
So you can cross out a and b already because it starts with caps which wouldn’t make sense which leave you with c and d so you could narrow it down to which on would make sense in a complete sentence which is D.
The plot is about how middle schoolers evolve. The setting of the school shows the everyday life of the main middle schooler going through the struggles of being a preteen and the preparation for high school. (If this doesn’t help google the plot of the story and think about the setting and the the relation.)
Humans are naturally good. We just do bad stuff. Being evil is taught, not in nature. No person is born evil. They do evil stuff. Most evil things are done with bad intentions. But people can change. People can change from ‘evil’ to good.