Option B. <u>"Plot & character - important"</u> is the most helpful note that Duncan has in order to find the central idea of the interview.
Explanation:
Duncan's notes on his interview to author Karin Slaughter show the different topics the author talked about during the interview regarding the main topic of writing. The notes that show how Slaughter reveals that in order to have a good story the author needs to focus equally on plot and on characters is probably the main point of the interview and should be the central idea of it when Duncan is writing it. Although Slaughter talks about other important topics when writing, they all work as secondary information when compared to the plot and character remark.
She was an imagist and wanted everything to be described in vivid sensory detail. She believes that although the gardens are imaginary in poetry, the toads should be described and depicted so thoroughly that they almost seem real and tangible and are vivid.
The aggressive preparation of war was growing along with nations armies during the buildup to both World War I and World War II. This was due in part to nationalism.