Bud, Not Buddy is the story of a ten-year-old African American boy named Bud Caldwell and his quest to find his father during the Great Depression. The novel begins in Flint, Michigan, at “the Home,” where Bud and other orphaned children wait to be placed into foster care.
Is this a book? I need to know so I can answer your question...
Answer:
Climate change, contrary to popular belief, is not only global warming. Yes, the Earth is becoming warmer than it has ever been, but places like Texas are experiencing colder weather during the winter as well. This winter, Texas got hit with a giant snowstorm and Texans didn't know how to respond, since most natives have never even seen snow before. If climate change continues, animals and plants that thrive in warmer climates may be driven out of their habitats, and some may even go extinct. With global warming, we may also see the oceans begin to see an increase in temperature, which may begin to affect animals living in our oceans. Also, our polar ice caps are also beginning to melt, which is driving polar bears and penguins out of their habitats and may even lead to extinction of both species. If we don't begin to prioritize climate change, animals and plants may begin to disappear.
The excerpt from "A Modest
Proposal" by Jonathan Swift, the narrator is criticizing England for being
completely inhuman with regard to other nations and their people. After all the English people fought for England without succeeding
something of a greater good, he would gladly surrender to other countries if
they lose, to make England realize its inhumane work.
The excerpt provides information about the narration because of the use of the pronoun 'I'.
The First person narrator tells a story from the first person point of view, by using the pronoun 'I'. This narrator is a character involved in the action and participates in the events of the story in some way. It can be a main character in the story or even an observer. Therefore, the information a reader gets from the story in a First person narration is limited to the things the narrator experiences, knows, thinks, or chooses to tell the reader.
Moreover, in the excerpt when it says:
-<em>but with a shudder even more thrilling than before- </em>
The narrator is expressing his own feelings, describing what he or she felt and how it happened. The narrator could not do the same with other characters, because he or she could not feel what another person felt.