A. the rise of the middle-class and the wide availability of affordable automobiles led to the development of suburban areas
Where is the story or other info?
A. She in turn had told him - indeed, had summoned him in order to entrust him with - another story, one from long ago, before the Civil War.
B. Most of the time, it’s a white character using the word - or, most conspicuously, the novel itself, in ts voice - with an uglier edge
C. The same few passages, in the very first pages, remind me of this - they’re markings on an entryway - sudden bursts of bristly adjective clusters.
D. It may represent the colosseum American literature came to producing an analog for “Ulysses,” which influenced it deeply - each in its way is a provincial Modernist novel about a young man trying to awaken from history - and like “Ulysses,” it lives as a book more praised than read, or more esteemed than enjoyed.
Answer:
Make me the brainlist
Explanation:
The protagonist is Ume, husband of Taita, who fought for his
wife whose shoulder was caught by the Alligator. He was successful in freeing her but she dies
because of severe loss of blood. He belonged to the native village and worked
for the author when called. Ume, his
Taita and his 8 year old son had gone to collect mussel-shells. It was Taita who was collecting the shells by
going into the river while Ume and his son kept a vigilant watch for the alligator.