Depends. If he is a good writer then he should include personification and if he's not he, most probably wouldn't
NIQQERSMr
Sophie is the accidental cheerleader
no
There are 117 pages in the book, The Accidental Cheerleader by Mimi McCoy.
Gary Paulsen wrote the book Hatchet. It is a young adult novel about a boy surviving in the wilderness after a plane crash.
Personification in "Twilight" would be giving human qualities, such as emotions or actions, to non-human things. For example, describing the wind whispering through the trees or the sun smiling down on the characters would be examples of personification in the book.
Yes, there is personification in the book "Out of the Dust" by Karen Hesse. The author uses personification to give human qualities to non-human things, like the dust storm that "covers everything, everywhere, like a blanket."
the accidental cheerleader
Sophie.
i swung the bat
Personification.
Yes, there is personification used in the book "Bud, Not Buddy" by Christopher Paul Curtis. Personification is a literary device where human qualities are given to non-human objects. An example from the book is when the suitcase talks and has a personality of its own.