Answer:
Hazel discovered that the author has published only one book, which she read and was incompletely left between. And, after the book came out, the author vanished and settled somewhere in Netherlands.
Hazel wanted him to respond to his letters because she can't wait <em>forever</em> to receive answers of her questions.
Explanation:
'The Fault in Our Stars' is a novel written by John Green. The novel is about a sixteen-year-old Hazel Grace, who is suffering from cancer and Augustus Gus, a seventeen-year-old lover boy of the novel, who has tumor in leg.
In Chapter 4, after Hazel completed reading a novel titled 'An Imperiaal Affliction', she did some research on the author. The book was written by an author named Peter Van Houten, who published only one book in his life, which is 'An Imperial Affliction' and after the book came out, he vanished from the US and went on to live in Netherlands.
The book that he published was left incomplete and midsentenced, curious what happened afterwards, Hazel wrote letters to the author asking about the rest of the story. She perceived that the narrator, Anna, in the story must have died that's why it is left midsentence. She was curious to know what happened to other characters in the story, and wrote letters to the author. She wanted him to reply to her letters because she wanted to know her answers, as she didn't have <em>forever</em> to wait for her answers.
The answer to your question, What statement below BEST compares these two accounts of life in London during the plague, is A. The worries of Daniel Defoe's fictional character closely resemble the real-life concerns about business and health that were recorded by Samuel Pepys in his diary.
Answer:
I think it is d I did it on Endjuinuty 2020 and got c wrong
Based on the given question, the best answer for this would
be:
C. Correct as is
The sentence presents the sequence on how Jackson had
painted the bicycle, it is correct on how it is because of the flow of the
first half to the connection of the sequence.
Answer:
Dramatic irony is used in lamb to the slaughter
Explanation: