Which version of War of the Worlds is more effective in creating fear of the unknown?
Which words, phrases, and sentences did the author select to make me think or feel this way about the reading selection?
Why are those words, phrases, and sentences effective in making me think or feel the way I do about the reading selection?
To help you, use your previously completed Venn diagram, where you recorded the differences and similarities of the novel and the radio broadcast.
Be sure to use direct quotations, summarizing, and paraphrasing to support your ideas about which version of War of the Worlds is more effective at creating fear of the unknown.
@BVB4rmy Please help me
I will try to help in my spare time.... In english class right now.
how long til you can help(: thanks so much
Uhm give me about 45-1 hour
thanks
@Goku-Kai
@BVB4rmy Yes? :)
Hmm... Either there offline or this is some major troll thing going on. Lol oh well! See ya!
lol no trolling going on shes in class and im trying to figure this out until she gets out
Ooooh lol Well here's what I found online! Maybe this may help? http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36/36-h/36-h.htm https://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/www/warworlds/warw.html
im done with it nobody ever helps me on here(:
@Goku-Kai
and that would have NEVER helped
I tried o.o
My teacher had me on Dyno looking at my computer.
lol
D; sowwie.
its oka
The radio broadcast created more fear of the unknown. He said the note stated that a huge shock "of almost earthquake intensity" occurred near Princeton. Professor Pierson believes it might be a meteorite. Hearing this made it more real.The broadcast made the whole thing a lot more frighting. Hearing the broadcast made it seem real and showed emotion. Reading it wasn't that scary because I was just hearing it in my head. But when I listened to it, the whole tone changed in my head.
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