The point of view contributes to the sad and hopeless feeling that the situation passes to the reader.
Explanation:
Harry's worst birthday is described in the book "Harry Potter and the secret camera". It is necessary to show that the point of view of all the books is the point of view of Harry himself, this shows the feeling of sadness and hopelessness on this anniversary. As you may already know, Harry is not happy living with his family, this birthday he is not at Hogwarts (the place he is happy) he is with the family that does not consider him important. In that case, Harry manages to express all his sadness through his point of view. If this situation were not from Harry's point of view, we would not understand his sadness deeply and completely.
Answer: The point of view contributes to how the events are described in the passage because in Harry Potter's point of view, his twelfth birthday was the worse.
Explanation:
For his twelfth birthday, Harry Potter had to stay upstairs in his room making absolutely no noise whatsoever and pretending he didn't exist. He couldn't even use Hedwig, his owl, to send messages to his friends Hermione and Ron because she was locked up by Uncle Vernon. In addition to this, he met Dobby, the house elf, who was on his bed. Dobby ruined Petunia's sumptuous pudding by making it crash to the ground. This (and the owl) causes the Masons, Uncle Vernon's guests, to leave the house. Point of view contributes to these events because in Harry's opinion, being stuck in his room with no form of communication is the worst way to spend his birthday. He thinks he should be spending it by going out with his friends or socializing.
The central idea is the central, unifying element of the story, which ties together all of the other elements of fiction used by the author to tell the story. The central idea can be best described as the dominant impression or the universal, generic truth found in the story. Therefore that is why that is the central idea