Not Waving but Drowning Theme of Death. You'd think that there couldn't be a clearer distinction than the one between life and death, but "Not Waving but Drowning" goes out of its way to muddy the water, so to speak. The focus, after all, is a talking corpse who just won't shut up even though the living can't hear him.
Sorry just commenting for algorithm
The theocracy that ruled Puritan salem
Answer:
A. Turner’s age is not allowing him to fully understand his father’s concerns over the racial conflict.
Explanation:
Turner Buckminster, a minister's son became friends with Lizzie Bright Griffin. In the course of their friendship, the community and his father were not in approval of such friendship. This is because she is from a poor island community.
At a time, they understood that people want to transform the island were Lizzie lives into a tourist place, therefore they want occupants to vacate the island. But Turner is immature to grasp and understand that.
Therefore, option A is correct.
“Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy” is historic novel by “Gary D. Schmidt”