Want this question answered?
The simple answer is that you must read the story first because it will tell you what happens in the end. That is what a story is for.
Read it. It is very sad.
In conventional academic contexts, one reacts properly to the ending of a story that has been read in two ways: in a subjective and objective manner. Subjectively, one records the feelings and thoughts provoked by the story. Objectively, one notes the themes, the style, the plot-lines, the character development, and other features of the story that has been read.
Read the book.
The only way you can read the ending of Daniel's Story is if you have the book at home. I know it is not available on the Kindle.
I doubt it. I think it will be Arthur and Morgana.
Tension, followed by feelings of passion, compromise and tenderness at the end.
Lots of people like to read fanfiction. Usually, they don't want the story they love to end, and like to read more about their favorite characters. Sometimes, they don't like the way the author's story went, and want to read alternate story lines.
yes it is true because if you read the end then u well no that it was a true story
First, you read the story. Then, you pretend you are one of the characters in that story and imagine what they would write in their diary about the end of that story. It's just a matter of make-believe.
When you are writing a book report, you can give the end of the story because everybody is supposed to have read it already!
The accident at the end of the story mirrors the chaos and unpredictability that the narrator felt in her relationship with her mother, reinforcing her feelings of instability and vulnerability. The accident serves as a metaphor for the unresolved issues and emotional turmoil within their relationship, highlighting the theme of familial tension and the lasting impact of past trauma.