On a novel, it'd make it pretty boring. Longer stories like novels need one or two good sub-plots to make things more interesting.
The central conflict would be the parents caught in a snow storm.
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That would be a very inappropriate conflict of interest. But sounds like a good storyline for a Victorian novel.
The main antagonist in "To Kill a Mockingbird" is Bob Ewell. He is a racist, abusive father who accuses Tom Robinson of assaulting his daughter Mayella, leading to a trial that serves as the central conflict of the novel.
Shows readers the protagonist's main problem
If you shoot Atticus in the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird," it would have a significant impact on the story as Atticus is a central character who plays a crucial role in the themes of justice, morality, and racism in the novel.
One novel that has a man vs. man conflict would be Uncle Tom's Cabin.
impair wound healing
The Allies defeated the Central Powers, but barely. If America hadn't entered the conflict the Triple-Entente would have lost.
The conflict is the main problem of the story. It can either be between characters, between a character and their surroundings, or a struggle a character has with themself.
Louis predominantly feeds on human blood. He struggles with his vampire nature and often feels conflicted about taking lives to sustain himself. This internal conflict is a central theme in the novel "Interview with the Vampire."
i would consider it a novel