An effective summary on the book <em>The Smartest kid in the universe</em> by Chris Grabenstein is:
- Jake, the protagonist innocently eats a bowl of jellybeans
- He discovers later that they were not ordinary jellybeans
- They were in fact, a prototype for the world's first ingestible information pills
- He soon finds out that he is the smartest kid in the universe
<h3>What is a Summary?</h3>
This refers to the concise representation of the main points of a story, in an objective manner, without the use of bias.
Hence, we can see that based on the given text, the protagonist consumes a bowl of jellybeans, but these are no ordinary jellybeans.
He soon discovers that this makes him really smart and knowledgeable because they were in fact, a prototype for the world's first ingestible information pills
Read more about summaries here:
brainly.com/question/25605883
#SPJ1
TO FORGIVE HIM OF HIS WORDS
<span>The narrator is, of course, unreliable. He interprets the look on her face as meaning that she has finally given herself totally to him, and to preserve that moment, he freezes it by killing her. His insistence that she felt no pain is the most obvious evidence of his unreliability. The speaker is insane. The poem is primarily about his insanity--dramatic monologues are always about characterizing the speaker.</span>
The answer is C. A musical argument appeals almost entirely to the listener's emotions and if this isn't the right answer my other option would be D.
Answer:
It has no punctuation at the end