Answer:
A minor character's storyline is as important and developed as the major characters' storylines.
Explanation:
Let's take a popular book series, like The Hunger Games or Harry Potter. In the Hunger Games, Katniss Evergreen is the main character, or, the major character as your question poses. The book focuses on her and her development. However, it also focuses on Peeta, who is technically a minor character, as the books predominantly focus on Katniss; but Peeta still had development, and proved to become vital to the storyline.
In Harry Potter, let's look at the 'Golden Trio'. Harry Potter is clearly the main character, and his development is evident all throughout the books. However, without his partners in crime, Ron Weasly and Hermione Granger, he never would have gotten very far. While there isn't much showcased in the books about their development, it's still there, just subtly so.
Answer:
women
Explanation:
Women are more likely to self-disclose
Lilly uses square brackets to show changed capitalization after the ellipsis
Answer:
'The Censors' is the story of a young man named Juan who gets a job censoring letters for an authoritarian government. He's great at it - so great that he censors his own letter and gets himself executed.
Explanation:
All letters written and mailed in this society go through the Censor's Secret Command, a bureaucratic agency that inspects everything for bombs, poisonous powders, secret messages, and more. Anything and everything could be a potential signal to the Censors that the letter's sender or receiver is plotting against the government, and Juan is worried that something in his letter will implicate Mariana.
He comes up with a genius plan: he'll get a job with the Censors, work his way up the ladder, and intercept his own letter to send it through safely. He's hired easily, as there's a continuous need for new censors for reasons that we learn later in the story.
Juan quickly and easily works his way up the ranks at the Censor's Command. By the end of the first week, he's in the department that actually censors letters and is fully devoted to his work. Juan censors letter after letter, throwing away most of them that come across his desk.
One day, Juan's own letter lands on his desk. He's so focused on being the best censor possible that he mercilessly censors it and tosses it in the reject pile, which is a red flag to his superiors. Juan is executed the next day, 'another victim of his devotion to his work.'