Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Mood - Flipped
The author's mood is confusion. The author gives you two sides of the story. The reader is presented on the situation. One side of the story makes that situation look good and the other doesn't. We can take a look at one of the first "problems." Juli had Bryce in a tight grip when they were in second grade. Juli thought she was going to get a kiss and Bryce had a hard time because he was annoyed. You don't know what to choose. There's evidence why it seemed romantic and why it seemed annoying. You have to choose a side, but if you want to be the open minded reader you have to take notes on how they see it both. I get confused when there's two sides that I believe in. It's like arguementive expect it's playing with you. You might feel proud of Bryce but when you see what Bryce did to Juli like throwing her eggs out, of course you feel angry at him now. Characters make mistakes but sometimes it's like dominios like this book. You don't know what side to be on entirely. You have to jump back and forth.
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