T. J. Palm was born in 1951 in Waterloo Iowa. And then at the age of two and a half was moved to California. She married at a young age and had one son Greg. She lived in California until she was 28, when she and her son moved to Las Vegas Nevada where she met her husband now of 23 years. She has two grand sons Zack and Austin. She now resides in a very small town high in the mountains of Colorado, on a horse ranch with her husband, her best friend and godson. Dawn and Lane moved to the ranch and into an apartment that was built for them to enjoy the rural life first hand. T. J’s Love for animals started to grow at the age of 3. When she got her first horse for her eighth birthday it was a quarter horse mare named Babe, who she promptly fell off the first time she rode her. T. J. has since owned thirty-nine horses and ponies, and she can’t count how many dogs’ cats and other animals. She loves, and has loved, all of them. In turn all of her life’s experiences has lead her to write this book. She has spent her whole life caring and enjoying them, and this is one of many stories to come.
I bet you can make this work somehow ...
Answer:
With a strong conjecture, it is advised that..
Here is a point (You need 3 points)
Its influences you
(NEVER use words like us, me, you, we and I.)
D. Work on it over several days and rewrite it at least twice.
The poem's purpose demonstrates how being childish is dearly miss when you're grown up. In the poem, Shakespeare uses poetic devices, like "night's bright" and "darkly bright", in other words, saying that his dreams are the only place in which he can re image his childhood, rather than the dark light he see being a adult.The most solid evidence we see is "All days are nights to see till I see thee, / And nights bright days
when dreams do show thee me.", meaning that the poet feels lonesome in his life, rather than how he felt being a child.
The way that the ending of this passage affects the reader is, The ending breaks from the normal world created in the rest of the story, leaving the reader shocked and surprised.
<h3>What is the summary of this passage?</h3>
The passage summarizes that the character was having a different situation with Monty before they heard the sound of the plan.
The plane took away the normal world from which the story was about to another scene with the plane.
Read more on excerpts here: brainly.com/question/21400963
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