<em>4. What question can help you decide where to break the lines in your poem?</em>
<em>Where do I want readers to stop, think, and reread part of the poem?</em>
I say letter c because d and b have dates which means they are facts
Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation is a non-fiction book written by Lynne Truss, the former host of BBC Radio 4's Cutting a Dash programme.
Hey there!
<u>Answer:</u> The author describes the dangerous situation that the characters in the story are facing.
<u>Explanation:</u> As we read each part from the passage, we see that all of them contain one thing. And, what exactly is that? We see that all of them contain the situation that they're all experiencing at the moment.
<u>Cited text:</u> <em>“I shouldn’t think of this as easy. I know what I need to do here, but I could lose one these men if just one thing goes wrong.”</em>
We can see that this is a present statement, and that something is going wrong between those people. I'm supposing it's a fire or something of that nature.
Most of the novel takes place in the Yukon Territory, which is between Alaska and present-day Canada. The story takes place during the Klondike Gold Rush, shortly after gold was discovered in the Klondike in 1896