1. Plot
Q: What is the story about? What are the main events in the story, and how are they related to each other?
A: This story is about a prisoner named Brille who is in a jail. He caught a waner who was stealing fertilizer and makes an agreement with that waner.
Q: Are the main events in the story arranged chronologically, or are they arranged in another way?
A: They are mostly in chronological order but there are also some flashbacks in some parts of the story.
Q: How is the story narrated? Are flashbacks, summaries, stories within the story used?
A: The story is mostly protrayed in a third person narrative and yes there are flashbacks and stories within the story.
Q: Is the plot fast-paced or slow-paced.
A: This story is more of a slow paced story, because of all it's details and it is mostly boring.
Q: How do the thoughts, behaviors, and actions of the characters move the plot forward?
A: The most actions and behaviors that escalated the story the most was when Brille caught the waner and made a deal with the waner.
Q: What are the conflicts in the plot? Are they physical, intellectual, moral, or emotional? Are they resolved? How are they resolved? Is the main conflict between good and evil sharply differentiated, or is it more subtle and complex?
A: Most of the conflicts in the plot are both physical and intellectual, and they are all resolved when the main character, Brille made a deal with the waner.
Q: What is the climax of the story and at what point in the story does the climax occur? Is the ending of the story happy, unhappy, or indeterminate? Is it fairly achieved?
A: The climax of the story was when Brille broke his agreement with the waner and ratted the waner out. It was fairly achieved.
Q: Does the plot have unity? Are all the episodes relevant to the total meaning or effect of the story? Does each incident grow logically out of the preceding incident and lead naturally to the next?
A: Yes the plot does have unity and all of the episodes are relevant to all the effects of the story, and all grow logically and lead to anther incident.
Q: What use does the story make of chance and coincidence? Are these occurrences used to initiate, to complicate, or to resolve the story? How improbable are they?
A: In the story they don't really use chance but at the later parts like the climax it is used to both resolve and complicate the story further and they are very improbable.
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