Much as you would like to respond that it implies loneliness, it really does not. There is nothing there that suggests isolation.
You'd also like to say that it is useful and hurrah that we can do these things, but unfortunately that choice is not offered. There's no rhyme, let alone a specific one. There is rhythm but not all the way through.
The only answer you have that is even remotely correct is C.
Susan E. Hinton was sixteen when she wrote "Lives Without Rumo" and eighteen when she saw it published. It's the story of Ponyboy Curtis, a boy from Tuba, Oklahoma. Ponyboy turned fourteen. He has two brothers: Sodapop and Darry. They are part of a group of greasers, young offenders from the outskirts of the city. Their enemies are the socials, or simply the socs. The greasers are thugs, thieves, dirty, wear long hair and gel. Socs come from the most affluent part of society. They go to university, walk-in mustangs and wear plaid shirts.
Yes, the book could have been written 50 years before or 50 years later. The book talks about social injustice. And since societies have formed injustices have been present in different ways. And one of the ways of overcoming it has been the individual struggle, the learning about life through reality, without some welcoming or familiar care for some people.
This sentence is a complex sentence. Usually, a complex sentence is composed of one independent clause and one or more dependent clause. In the sentence, there is one independent clause (use the pump in the storage room) and one dependent clause (if the ball needs air). So, the answer is C.
1. When Greene wrote about Jerome's father being killed by a falling pig, he is using humor of situation. The pig in the situation fell from the balcony and took the life of his father.
2. Jerome become engaged when it was "neither too early nor too late". Sally, his fiancee, reconciled his fear eternally.