any body read A wrinkle in time
Sure. What do you need?
ok hold on
What is NOT unusual about Charles Wallace? (1 point) his vocabuary his ability to cook his ability to read minds
im so confused!!
Charles Wallace is Meg's precocious little brother. He has an advanced vocabulary, and if I recall, he sort of knows when people are lying to him. So I'd have to say something about cooking.
It's a great book! (I used to have it memorized, but it's been a few years now.)
thanks
have another question
@etbjr69 Which of the following is NOT an activity for the children of Camazotz? hitting a ball bouncing a ball jumping rope have a feeling that it is option 1
On Camazotz, all the children play games exactly in time with each other. All kids bounce balls with exactly the same rhythm. All kids jump rope with exactly the same rhythm. No one hits a ball though, because such games might require creativity and independence. So that's the one they do NOT do.
Promise me you're gonna read this, right?
I reached chapter 7
ok so I was correct
Good!
Camazotz comes late in the book. It's where Meg and Charles Wallace's father has been imprisoned.
this Q is tricky for me Meg's struggle with IT is an example of (1 point) internal conflict. external conflict.
because I think that Meg had gone through both
Wow. Good question. It's both. And it might depend on the definitions of internal and external you've been discussing. But this is the climax of the book. So you may want to check it out.
what would you pick though?
IT is just a disembodied brain that controls everything on Camazotz. Meg does not fight it physically, though she does have to fight it mentally and emotionally, first to save her father, and then to save Charles Wallace. In the end, though, what she comes to understand is that she can only break the strength of IT through love. But it takes her a while to get there. So I'm not sure whether that's external or internal. There's a long internal monologue where Meg realizes IT cannot tolerate love, where, she knows, IT would shrivel up and die if IT were loved. But she concludes that she can love Charles Wallace, and so she does, and so there are all freed.
Don't know whether that's external or internal, but good luck.
hmm
Given that it's L'Engle, and her books are mostly about moral and spiritual strength, I'd go with internal.
ok
what about this Q , i picked option 2 Which of the following could NOT be a theme, or central message, of the book? Friends are more important than family. Appreciate your own uniqueness and individuality. Love is the best weapon to fight evil and hate.
Given the summary I just wrote, what would you pick?
hmm , last option
Sorry, the teacher and parent in me is coming out. Yep. Go with the third. Read the book, now. I'm out. Peace!
yeah will read the rest of it . your summary did sense to me like the third option must be the correct one !
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