The some effects of telling the story Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster boy primarily from the perspectives of children is that a less-biased insight into what is happening between the towns and a stronger emphasis on the emotional aspect of the racial conflict.
Turner Buckminster, the son of a minister, has just moved from Boston, Massachusetts to Phippsburg, Maine, and is constantly reprimanded for simple misunderstandings, not to mention that the Phippsburg boys automatically dislike him for that they are bad at baseball. Turner meets a black girl, Lizzie Bright Griffin, who befriends him despite his social difficulties. Turner must save Lizzie's family and friends before they all have to leave, or worse, end up in an asylum in New Gloucester, Maine. But that means confronting the authorities, including Turner's father.
Hence, the correct answers are a less-biased insight into what is happening between the towns and a stronger emphasis on the emotional aspect of the racial conflict.
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Answer:
I didn't understood the question.
Explanation:
Can u please type it again...
As the story opens, Hattie Owen is in her home. Her parents have gone
out for the evening, but she isn't alone because the family operates a
boarding house and Mr. Penny and Miss Hagerty are both upstairs. Hattie
is watching home movies. She's pleased that her father trusted her to do
everything, from setting up the screen to feeding the reels of film
through the projector. She says that she turned twelve the previous
summer and that she will forever look at the summer as a turning point
in her life because of Adam. She says that she dates things as "before
Adam" or "after Adam".
As the movie begins to play, Hattie sees Angel Valentine, who was
also a boarder over the summer when Adam came. Angel is standing on the
front porch of the boarding house, waving toward