Which hero or heroine …show more content…
There is always someone opposing what they believe in and they constantly have to push back. I think their problems are internal. They aren’t directly affected by someone else’s opinions, but they feel as though these people shouldn’t think the way that they do.
How would you describe the typical plot of your author’s stories? I think the typical plot of the author’s story is about people who stand on different sides of one point. The plots are typically about families who all have difference of opinions. Their differences concern race, religion, personality types. The faults in some of these characters usually end up creating a huge conflict or problem that everyone has to face. I think the plots are also about boundaries and how people cross them.
In terms of plot, conflict, and so on, what’s the most typical story? The least typical? …show more content…
The conflict between the characters almost immediately start after they are introduced. The kids are annoyed with the grandmother; the grandmother is annoyed with the world. She wants things to go her way etc. The plot of this entire story wasn’t revealed until The Misfit showed up. We saw the grandmother manipulate her way through the story; however, the conversation with The Misfit proved that she couldn’t talk her way out of everything. She couldn’t tell The Misfit that he was a decent person and expect everything to turn out how she wanted. I think the least typical is the story Good Country People. There were several different people with different views that were introduced in the beginning. They all had their ways of right and wrong. The conflicts started towards the middle of the story, but the plot was present at the beginning of the story we just didn’t see it.
How would you describe the setting of these stories? What is the significance and role of the setting or environment (social, cultural, and/or physical) in the