Answer:
Lesson Summary
Explanation:
The Chocolate Touch is a book about a boy named John Midas, who turns everything to chocolate as soon as it enters his mouth. While playing outside one day, he finds a coin on the ground which he trades for chocolate from a mysterious store. After he eats the chocolate, his curse begins.
I took a lazy stroll up the cobbled path leading to a small farm in the village. Sky bluer than the ocean, yet very few clouds had drifted by. Birds -which never sleep- talk among the crowded trees, the floor scattered with autumn leaves. They sing a song of many chitters and tweets. I was lost within the lightness of the breeze and the minty aroma seem to have took to me. It was the most delightful freshest smell I have ever smelt before. For this farm had many things I adored.
This would be a direct object. The softball is the indirect object
Answer:
Agree,
Explanation:
The desire to belong is a powerful emotion it shows the state of belonging which also means that it is powerful and the state of belonging also says that the person/ author is somewhere they personally think they are supposed to be.
Answer:
Explanation: A boarding-school story set in the aftermath of the Rhodesian Civil War examines evil from all sides. The Haven School for boys is anything but for narrator Robert Jacklin. When the boy arrives from England at 13, the son of a liberal intellectual attached to the British Embassy, he initially makes friends with one of the school's few black students, but he quickly learns that safety and acceptance are among the school's white elite. Over the course of the next five years he changes from likable milquetoast into a thug's accessory, understanding and hating but choosing to ignore his moral compromise. Wallace, in his debut, draws on his own childhood in post-revolutionary Zimbabwe to inform this grimly magnetic snapshot of petty evil. In many regards, it's a classic boarding-school novel, full of A Separate Peace–like inevitability; narrator Robert is liberal with "had I but known" statements foreshadowing some kind of doom. But as Robert's mentor in brutality becomes ever more unhinged, the tension ratchets up and the book turns into a first-rate, surprisingly believable thriller. In its portrayal of race relations in a wounded country as well as of the ugly power dynamics of a community of adolescent boys, this novel excels, bringing readers up to the grim, uncertain present with mastery.