Read the excerpt from chapter 8 of Obasan by Joy Kogawa. "Who are the letters from?” I ask loudly. She does not respond. Her fac
e is expressionless. After a while she puts down the magnifying glass. "Everyone someday dies,” she says again. By repeating this so often, I suppose she is trying to make realizable what is real. Surely that is task enough for her today. But I ask once more, "Who are the letters from?” She stares steadily at the table. The greater my urgency to know, the thicker her silences have always been. No prodding will elicit clues. Her hand moves on the table like an electrocardiograph needle, delicate and unreadable. Then, with her back bent forward, she stands up and shuffles out of the room. Today is not, I repeat, reprimanding myself—today is not the day for unnecessary questions. Why does the author include the phrases "the thicker her silences” and "No prodding will elicit clues”? to develop a mood of carelessness, as Obasan is uninterested in the past to develop a mood of calm, as Obasan is quiet and moves about slowly to develop a mood of helplessness, as Nomi is frustrated with Obasan’s failure to respond to her to develop a mood of anger, as Nomi needs Obasan to help her understand the letters’ contents