Help!!!
on....
If that voice sounds true, don't thank me. Thank that great horned owl. (Or perhaps it was not an owl after all?) And thank the children, my own and others, who have never forgotten that a good story can be true. For they understand that the power of imagination is truly the power of creation.
Which of the following is implied in the paragraph? The author doesn't want the reader to thank the horned owl for voice. The author doesn't think voices can be true. The author believes that some people forget about the power of imagination. The author believes imagination and creation are connected.
The author does not believe he thought of Merlin's voice on his own.
I would say D.
What?? @Elsa213
The author does not believe he thought of Merlin's voice on his own.
Not a choice...
Another way to tap the power of imagination is through place. My own background as a writer is rooted in nature, having grown up reading Henry David Thoreau, Rachel Carson, and John Muir long before I ever dipped into Madeleine L'Engle, Lloyd Alexander, Ursula Le Guin, E. B. White, or J.R.R. Tolkien. My early writings were really nature journals; at nine, I wrote a complete biography—of a tree. (It was a once-majestic chestnut tree not far from my home.) So it should come as no surprise that I view place as much more than just a setting for a story. It is, in truth, another form of character, no less alive and complex, mysterious and contradictory, than the richest character in human form.
'.'
\(\huge\color{red}{{Happy}}\) \(\huge\color{blue}{{4th}}\) \(\huge\color{red}{{of}}\) \(\huge\color{blue}{{July!}}\)
What does the author imply when he writes, "Another way to tap the power of imagination is through place"? The power of imagination is only found in place. There are many ways to tap the power of imagination. There are other ways to use place. The best way to tap the power of imagination is through place.
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