The Climax Is When G.T. Is Elected and then passes away.
The Falling Action is when Braverman Is Attacked by a gang.
:) But Anyways It Is A Very Wonderful Book :)
In the falling action of "The Schwa Was Here," the main characters continue to deal with the consequences of their actions and the events that unfolded in the climax. They may reflect on what happened and try to come to terms with the outcome before the story reaches its resolution.
Here are some:Introduction, Rising Action, Climax, Anti-Climax, Secondary Climax. Was this what you were looking for?
Rising action builds up to the climax, and the plot stage following the climax is called falling action. The climax essentially is the highest point of tension or energy in the story. Thus, the plot has nowhere to go but down after that. Guys you can literally google this but I'm just going to put this here for now
I don't think you're understanding the term properly. Conflict means tension. There's no list of "Put the conflict here and then put something else" when you're writing a story. Conflict must come throughout the story, right up to the climax, or your story is boring.
In Shel Silverstein's book called, conveniently, Falling Up. Here is a link to the Wikipedia page for a list of all the poems in that book: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falling_Up_(book) Also you can find falling up in your local libraries near you
Oh, dude, the falling action in "Just Once Moose" is like the part where things start winding down after the climax. It's when all the drama and action are like, "Okay, I'm outta here," and you're left with the aftermath. So, yeah, it's basically the cool-down period before the story wraps up.
Here I Come Falling was created in 2005.
Here I Come Falling ended in 2008.
Plot development is how a book progresses. You start with the beginning and see what are the details that lead to the climax.The climax is the part in the book that everything leads up to. For example if Someone has to make a big decision the climax is their answer. then you see the declining actions. How the book winds down and that is it.
Rainsford appearing in the bedroom. If the resolution is that Rainsford survives and Zaroff does not, the turning point must be what causes that ending. The cause of that ending is Rainsford's appearance in the room. There is no falling action seen in the novel. The climax is the turning point of the story. It mostly falls in the middle or at the end of the story. In other words it is when Rainsford changes his personality. The climax, i think is personally is when Rainsford jumps into the sea, from here on the events change in the mood of the setting and what actually happends I must say the Climax of the short story "The Most Dangerous Game" is when Zaroff decided he wanted to hunt Rainsford which was when the story had the most action. when Rainsford had to run for his life and also had to make traps. Although many people say the climax was when Rainsford came into Zaroff's bedroom and attacked/killed him
Here are some tips for doing your plot diagram:Exposition: the basic information needed at the beginning of the story so that you know who, what, when and whereRising Action: the conflict and tension that builds up suspense until you get to the climaxClimax: the peak of the action; the part where everything happensFalling Action: winding down, explaining what just went onResolution: wrapping everything up and hinting what's going to happen to the characters next
The verb here is reading the book. Since reading is the verb and it is action so it is a verb.