Asked by mikku454
Please help me with coming up with a thesis statement for this passage ?
In Cormac McCarthy's The Road, the father and an old man who is perhaps named Ely (167, 171) discuss God. Considering this passage carefully—“When I saw that boy I thought I had died.... What's wrong with that?" (172-173)—decide whether this scene answers an important question raised by the novel or alternatively raises questions answered more satisfactorily elsewhere.
In Cormac McCarthy's The Road, the father and an old man who is perhaps named Ely (167, 171) discuss God. Considering this passage carefully—“When I saw that boy I thought I had died.... What's wrong with that?" (172-173)—decide whether this scene answers an important question raised by the novel or alternatively raises questions answered more satisfactorily elsewhere.
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Answered by
Anonymous
I have no idea where to start from ? I mean I don't get what it means by "decide whether this scene answers an important question raised by the novel" ?
Answered by
mikku454
I have no idea where to start from ? I mean I don't get what it means by "decide whether this scene answers an important question raised by the novel" ?
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