The above question requires a personal answer. For that reason, I can't answer it for you, but I'll show you how to do it.
<h3>Answer structure</h3>
- Introduce the author you chose.
- Show which was his most remarkable work.
- Show the reason that made you choose this author.
- Show how his work impacts you.
To choose the author, you will have to do a brief research on the life and work of the indicated authors and decide which one you identify with the most. This identification may exist because of the author's literary production, or because of the way he lives.
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Well naturally, the two people should meet in the beginning. They ultimately need to fall in love so your story can later determine if it’s “fate” or just “love” they’re experiencing. If you’ve been in love before, that should help you write. Never answering the question “fate or love” could be cool too. Leave the reader to decide... but that’s more of an ending lol.
You can make the couple meet online, in person, naturally, on accident, literally however. In my opinion a long distance relationship might solidify the question “fate or love” simply because in a LDR (long distance relationship) the two can be so deeply in love, but so far away. This almost forces you to think “is this relationship fate, or are they just in love?” You need conflict definitely. Provoke the mind to ask this question. You can do it!!
Okay, Ok, and O.K. are all acceptable spelling of "ok"
i am thinkis tHt its a secind