The major asked me to have a drink with him and two other officers. We drank rum and it was very friendly. Outside it was gettin
g dark. I asked what time the attack was to be and they said as soon as it was dark. I went back to the drivers. They were sitting in the dugout talking and when I came in they stopped. I gave them each a package of cigarettes, Macedonias, loosely packed cigarettes that spilled tobacco and needed to have the ends twisted before you smoked them. Manera lit his lighter and passed it around. The lighter was shaped like a Fiat radiator. I told them what I had heard. In the passage, Hemingway’s characterization of the narrator and his peers Group of answer choices provides important details about their backgrounds. allows the reader to fill in the details without being given all of the information. slows down the narrative to allow the reader to reflect on the meaning. develops only one character at a time to not overwhelm the reader
In the passage, Hemingway's characterization of the narrator and his peers, allows the reader to fill in the details without being given all of the information.
Answer: Option B.
Explanation:
The excerpt provided here is apart of the novel ‘A Farewell to Arms’ which is authored by Ernest Hemingway, written during the onset of World War l.
In this passage, Hemingway have characterized the narrator and peers by not only providing the information in detail. For example in the sentence, ‘They were sitting in the dugout talking and when I came in they stopped’, we can see that the narrator have simply stated that drivers were talking without providing much information about their talks. It thus allows the readers to fill in the details.