hat advice would you give to your protagonist about a problem he/she is having?
Make sure you follow the reading response checklist:
For a “4”: Did I…. • Write a topic sentence that provided the title, author, and genre of my text? • Provide context of what is happening in the text, so my reader understands what I’m talking about? • Find a direct quote from the text that proves my idea? • Thoroughly explain the significance of my quote/how it proves my idea? • Check for correct punctuation and spelling?
In Jeff Kinney's realistic fiction novel Rodrick Rules, the advice that i would give Greg is to not be afraid. Greg didn't tape Rodrick's talent show turn and instead his mom did it and it was really bad for Rodrick. Rodrick didn't have anything to send to the record companies. Rodrick told everyone Greg's secret. "Rodrick told me that the secret was out" I think this means after hearing this, he was really scared and afraid of what is going to happen to him. Therefore the advice that i would give Greg is not to be afraid.
In Rick Rioridan's fantasy novel The Mark of Athena, the advice I would give my 7 protagonist is to relax. The story is about Gaea, she is a Titan who wants to defeat the 7 half-bloods and use Percy's, (one of the protagonist of the protagonist) blood to awake herself. So she put a bounty on the heads so everyone is trying to get the money and the 7 demigods When They get to Rome, Piper(protagonist) thinks about " If their information is correct, it would be Nico di Angelo's Last day of life and the day Rome is destroyed" (334) this means that they might give up when they are only 18 and they have the responsibilities of a superhero. I know that they should not give up they will succeed casue they never kill off the main character.
In Markus Zusak's historical fiction novel The Book Thief the advice I would give to Lisel (the protagonist) is to not to get so angry and to try to control her anger. Lisel lives in Germany on Himmel Street with her foster parents and attends school there to. Before livening on Himmel steet Lisel did not learn how to read until Hanns Huberman teaches her how to read little by little. In school their is a reading test that Lisel has to take were Lisel has to read outloud the story in front of her class. She messes up and cannot read it and this boy named Ludwig Schmelik startes to bug her and make fun of her. So lisel beats him up. a girl watching the fight says "she's gonna kill him!" and then the narrtor (death) say "Lisel did not kill him.But she came very close." This shows that Lisel should control her anger because she almost killed him and she got in trouble for it afterword.
In Jules Verne's realistic fiction novel, Around The World In 80 Days, the advice I would give to Mr. Fogg the main character is to be more aware of what's going on around him. The novel is about Mr. Fogg and his servant passepartout going on a journey around the world in 80 days. During one of the trips from China to San Francisco they run into a storm on a boat. The sailor informs Mr. Fogg that the may be delayed. In a concerned tone Mr. Fogg tells the sailor, "Let us not speak of that sir," and ends the conversation. This shows that Mr. Fogg should plan ahead and not just ask any sailor to take his boat to San Francisco after he misses his original boat, otherwise he'll run into problems.
In the fiction novel I Am Number Four by Pittacus Lore, the protagonist John Smith is one of the nine aliens from his planet left. There are these evil other aliens called Mogadorians that want to kill the nine aliens of his kind. They are going to kill them in order, the first 3 have died and he is number four. So the protagonist John Smith has to move all over the place, change his name and erase all of the evidence where they are because if the Mogadorians find him they are going to kill him. The advice that I would give to John is to stop running and stand up for his kind by fighting the Mogadorians because no matter what they are going to end up finding him.
Make sure you follow the reading response checklist:
For a “4”: Did I….
• Write a topic sentence that provided the title, author, and genre of my text?
• Provide context of what is happening in the text, so my reader understands what I’m talking about?
• Find a direct quote from the text that proves my idea?
• Thoroughly explain the significance of my quote/how it proves my idea?
• Check for correct punctuation and spelling?