Shamsie's most likely answer would be that the reader should research the meaning of the references and allusions, as they are essential to understanding the work.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- Shamsie's works contain many literary references and allusions.
- These elements are essential for understanding the work, as they provide information that is in full harmony with the purpose and theme of these works.
- Therefore, the reader must understand the references and allusions, to be able to make an efficient and meaningful reading.
- If the reader notices references and allusions that he or she does not understand, he or she should research their meanings in order to continue with the reading.
It is important to emphasize that literary references occur when literary works are cited in a text. Literary allusions, on the other hand, occur when literary works, authors, characters, or any other element linked to literature is cited in a text.
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I think you are right. The form verbs take to express a hypothetical or possible situation.
The Shakespeare Stealer is a 1998 historical fiction novel by Gary Blackwood. Taking place in the Elizabethan-era England, it recounts the story of Widge, an orphan whose master sends him to steal Hamlet from The Lord Chamberlain's Men. If we skip the opening setting of Mistress MacGregor's orphanage, then the three settings of The Shakespeare Stealer are the rectory in "the nearby hamlet of Berwick"; the home of Mrs. and Dr. Timothy Bright, a medical practitioner who had studied at Cambridge and who was also the rector of Berwick; Simon Bass's home in Leicester; and the city on the Thames, London City, home of the Globe Theatre.