The rising action happens after the background-giving of the story up until the climax of th story. The Interlopers's climax was when the interloper-wolves come at the ending. The rising action of The Interlopers is basically everything that happens after the author gives you the background of the story, up until the characters get eaten by wolfs. So the rising action would be: Ulrich and Georg find eachother, a tree falls, the two get trapped under the tree, they argue, they decide to become friends, they yell for help, wolves arrive. Technically, the climax isn't even in the story. It is only implied that thecharas were eaten.
There is no falling action in the book. the book jsut leaves you hanging
what is the rising action of magnifico
Rising action and falling action
i think the rising action is when the two men first start to smell the cheese. But they dont know what it is from and where it was comming from.
there must be a rising action in the story to keep it interesting
There is no falling action in the book. the book jsut leaves you hanging
the rising action of this lottery ticket is the rising of the action...
what is the rising action and falling action of pocahontes
what is the rising action of magnifico
rising action of hercules in myth
No, climax is what the rising action leads up to.
rising action of death of a salesman
The rising action is before the climax. There the tension rises.
rising action is when the story is about to get good in other words the part before the action or non-action
rising action in a literary sense is the action leading up to the climax.
Yes, falling action occurs after the rising action in a typical plot structure. Rising action builds tension and develops the story, leading to the climax, while falling action follows the climax and shows the aftermath of the main conflict being resolved.
In the highly artificial schema from which the term 'rising action' is drawn, Act II of the play is always the rising action.