With the exception of the slight rustling of dried stalks where the rice had once grown in the spring, the silence was as oppressive as the lump Ju-Lin felt in her throat. She gazed at the parched rice paddies and wondered when she had last seen a raindrop. The severe drought had dried all the crops and spread despair across the land like wildfire. Now, it had suddenly taken on an even more ominous meaning, for Ju-Lin had felt her world come to a crashing halt with her father’s words moments earlier.

“Ju-Lin,” her father had said that evening, “the time I dread has come. There is so little food left that even the crickets have failed to chirp.

Quen Law/YonSheng Xuan. Cricket Media Incorporated

Question
Use the excerpt from “The Invisible Red String” to answer the question.

Which simile uses the setting to emphasize the problem?

(1 point)
Responses

“even the crickets have failed to chirp”
“even the crickets have failed to chirp”

“world come crashing to a halt”
“world come crashing to a halt”

“spread despair like wildfire”
“spread despair like wildfire”

“slight rustling of dried stalks”

1 answer

The simile that uses the setting to emphasize the problem is “spread despair like wildfire.” This simile connects the spread of despair to the setting of the parched rice paddies, highlighting the severity of the drought and its impact on the land and its people.