Unit 1: Short Fiction I
Showing 21 of 21 questions
The narrator's description of the room serves primarily to
The detail that the clock "had stopped at twenty past four — whether morning or afternoon, no one could say" most effectively conveys
The phrase "as though she had grown into it" most nearly characterizes Mrs. Aldridge as
The narrator's tone in the passage is best described as
The contrast between the father's public behavior and his private ritual with the radio primarily suggests
The expression described as "something between homesickness and prayer" characterizes the father as
The narrator's decision to catalogue what the fire destroyed by what it did NOT destroy functions to
The final sentence — "We stared at each other across a canyon of language" — conveys the idea that
The narrator's use of lists — "the orchids, the bridge scores, the pronunciation of 'foyer'" — primarily serves to
The phrase "visitors who existed only in the subjunctive" means that the guest room is maintained for
The narrator's distinction between "a photograph of a place" and "a photograph of a memory disguised as a place" reveals
The narrator of this passage can best be described as
A first-person narrator is limited because:
An unreliable narrator creates meaning by:
Third-person omniscient narration allows:
Free indirect discourse blends:
Second-person point of view uses "you" and:
Narrative pacing is controlled through:
The narrator's description of the room primarily serves to
The phrase "the words were a stranger's" is best interpreted as
The narrator's description of the room primarily serves to
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