Means how the story stays the same
He's trying to explain what exactly motivated him, particularly in the second paragraph. It was none of the things that would motivate someone to commit murder. Gain of any kind was out of the question. Feelings were not the motive. Nothing the old man had motivated him.
It was just his eye. So he's in a battle with himself. (That's the first answer).
We are leading up to something and we need to have a background. This is not the climax or the resolution. It is not the falling action -- just the opposite. It is the build up towards the climax.
So the only thing it can be is the exposition which is the second answer.
Answer:
Explanation:
As a result, the sentences that suggest he is writing a memoir are the ones in which he includes himself and other people, using words like I, we and us.
Answer:
relating to wanting to make their parents proud.
Explanation:
The author mentions "thoughts of her father only drove her". The text states "'...he used to say, `Oh, Bindi, I'm so proud of you, good job, well done.` It was really nice.'" It hints that the speaker liked it when her father complimented her and wants to make her dad proud.
Hope this helps! :D