First, research the topic. Find out how setting affects the plot of a story. Then, just pretend you're talking to a friend and telling them all about this subject. Start by making a little introduction to say what you're going to be talking about. Then write down what you'd tell them. Make each thing you'd say into a complete sentence that is grammatically correct, though! Now, go back and read over what you wrote to be sure it is in logical order and makes sense. That's an essay.
Setting affects character behavior, which drives the plot ~apex
I am assuming that this is a school / college essay and therefore, it would be cheating for someone to write the essay for you. However, if you wanted tips about the moon and the sixpence
beginning, plot, and an end
Setting affects the feelings of a character
exposisiton
What was he setting out to achieve The characters The plot The stylistics and dialogue Was he successful in what he attempted
Setting affects character behavior, which drives the plot ~apex
I am assuming that this is a school / college essay and therefore, it would be cheating for someone to write the essay for you. However, if you wanted tips about the moon and the sixpence
beginning, plot, and an end
Plot,Setting,Characters,Climax and Ending.
If you follow the setup SCASI it should help Setting Characters Action (plot) Style Ideas (themes) start with an introduction though and finish with a conclusion xD
There's no limits; you can write what you want. Read read read, write write write, listen to everything, watch people, think a lot... And then sit down and actually write it. (basic plot comes first, then characters, then setting, then culture, then main plot)
First you need to condense the plot of each chapter, erasing the irrelevant parts. then you must make it into one whole plot, and then put it in essay form.
What is the relationship between the setting and the plot in The Crucible?
I think your teacher wants you to write what you thought of the book - what was its theme, what were its main plot areas and what did you think about them? In other words, what do YOU think the book was about?
The setting is where and when the story occurs. If you don't have a setting, it's very hard to understand and enjoy the plot.
The sentence should be punctuated as follows: "Read a book, such as 'My Side of the Mountain,' and write a reflection of the plot." This punctuation clarifies the instruction by setting off the book title with commas and enclosing it in quotation marks for emphasis.