Across
- 1. how the author makes the reader feel
- 6. you say one thing, but you mean the opposite (like sarcasm)
- 8. the character or force (human or not) that gets in the way of what the main character wants
- 10. "booming voice" "cackling witch" "hooting owl"
- 11. language that appeals to the senses
- 13. a reference to something that people will recognize--like when Taylor Swift talks about how she and her boyfriend are Romeo and Juliet
- 16. In this point of view, the narrator is not in the story, and the story focuses on one person
- 17. "The song was a silvery dust."
- 19. the major turning point in the plot--everything builds to this moment!
- 20. the point in the plot when the complication builds
- 22. the point of the story; best written as a complete sentence!
- 24. how the author feels toward the character, story, etc.
- 25. clues the author gives us about things to come
- 26. a struggle between two opposing forces - we must have this in stories!
- 27. the events in a story and the order in which they occur
Down
- 2. the audience/reader knows something the character doesn't (Titanic passengers! You are going to die!)
- 3. how the author develops a character
- 4. "The tiny shriveled baby looked like an old man."
- 5. the main and most important character in the story
- 7. a type of character that changes in the story
- 8. "Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream"
- 9. In this point of view, the narrator is a character in the story.
- 12. the background information in a story
- 14. a type of character that does not change in the story
- 15. probably one of the most popular conflicts is man vs. ______
- 18. the opposite of what is expected happens (a fire station burns down)
- 21. An author gives us indirect clues about the character, so we have to __________ about the character.
- 23. "Summer was dead, and autumn had not yet been born."
