Answer:
Turner Buckminster
sees Malaga as an escape from the
world he does not fit in
Lizzie Bright
knows Malaga as a home and does
not want to be anywhere else
Reverend Buckminster
views Malaga as a place that is not as
respectable as Phippsburg
Explanation:
From the novel, <em>"Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy" </em>, the various perspectives of the characters are apparent.
For Lizzie Bright, Malaga is a home to her and she is quite content there
For Turner Buckminster, Malaga is a positive place to him and a welcome escape from the world where he does not fit in.
For Reverend Buckminster, he believes that Malaga is a less respectable place than Phippsburg.
From the novel, Turner, Rev Buckminster's son meets a black girl Lizzie Bright Griffin and becomes friends with her despite his social difficulties.
He tries to save Lizzie's family and friends before they lose their precious home in Malaga
Turner meets a thirteen year old black girl, Lizzie Bright Griffin, befriends her, despite his difficulty with social situations. Turner has to save Lizzie's family and friends before they all must leave, or worse, get put into an insane asylum in New Gloucester, Maine.