Answer:
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As it is banned around schools everywhere, it should be taught to show students the past. Teachers who are teaching it still with advisory from others have stated that it is the best read of their career. The students enjoyed it and the teacher enjoyed it as well. The book has children who are rebellious, illiterate, and more. Students enjoy this book, so why ban it? Officials banned this book due to its somehow racist language and think it's inappropriate for children. Children aren't the ones reading it, it's normally students over 10th grade. As if we've never heard any of these words before or faced these problems.
-Mabel <3
Option A answers the text best.
Answer:
Far
Explanation:
The text seems to indicate that all around the wreck is sand as far as the eye can see, hence boundless.
The emotion the narrator in Living to Tell the Tale mainly feels toward the thief is D: empathy.
In <em>Living to Tell the Tale</em>, García Márquez makes an autobiographical recount of all the characters that has been significant in his life. He starts writing this book when he finds out he has cancer and he thinks it is important to tell the readers about all the people that has, in some way or another, changed his life.
When he remembers the events in his short story <em>La Siesta del Martes</em>, which describes a woman arriving in town with her daughter to put flowers on the grave of her son who had been shot while attempting to break into García Márquez's aunt's house, he says he feels like if he was the thief. He reflect's himself in the thief. His autobiographical self is beginning to live the life of the characters ins his fiction.