I was in a bad mood, Malala blogged. Vacation was normally fun but no one was in the mood to celebrate. But what do you do when
you’re 11? You go to the playground and you play, so that's what they did. Some of the girls said they thought everything would work out. They'd be back, they said. Malala wanted to be hopeful, too. But before she left, she turned around and took one long look at the building. —"Pakistan’s Malala," Ashley Fantz Which four lines from the passage show Malala’s viewpoint? "I was in a bad mood," Malala blogged. Vacation was normally fun but no one was in the mood to celebrate. Some of the girls said they thought everything would work out. Malala wanted to be hopeful, too. [S]he turned around and took one long look at the building.
A compound sentence is a sentence that connects two independent clauses, typically with a coordinating conjunction like and or but. They're best for combining two or more self-sufficient and related sentences into a single, unified one.