<span>What did Mark Twain dream of becoming when he was a boy?
</span>a deckhand
The sentence that best reveals the context is: "With the end of the cold war there was the creeping concern that without a focus for hatred and distrust, a sense of national identity would evaporate, that the left side of the hyphen—African-American, Mexican-American, Irish-American—would overwhelm the right."
By reading "...the end of the cold war...", the reader infers the time the story is set in. The Cold War started after the Second World War (1945) and ended in 1991 with the end of the Soviet Union.
In addition, by reading "...the left side of the hyphen - African-American, Mexican-American, Irish-American - would overwhelm the right", readers can deduce that the author is referring to the US and its fear of loosing a sense of nationalism and unity among its diverse population.
In all, the setting is the US in the early 90's because of the reference to the end of the Cold War and the fear of not being unified anymore.
First they would need 2 characters and make them have a thing for eachother, kind of like pocahontas when her and John meet he already likes her
A direct quote should NEVER be long-winded and lengthy. You want to try to get the point across in a carefully selected short excerpt, not copy a large portion of someone else's work and insert it into your paper with a little bit of your own writing.
Answer:
Curley's wife is his possession. She wears form fitting dresses, high heels, too much make up, simple, yet pretty. Her problem is that no man around will talk with her for fear of her husband. She moves about the ranch searching out someone to talk to and when she comes across Crooks, Lennie, and Candy she immediately demeans them.
Explanation:
I hope this helps. Good luck and God bless. Jeremy