Assad
Read the following excerpt from the article Vision, Voice and the Power of Creation: An Author Speaks Out," by T. A. Barron, and answer the question that follows:
Yet deeper than character, or even place, is another concept: volce. More than any other doorway to the Imagination, I find this one the tricklest to open-and the hardest to close. For a
character's true volce is heard, Its ones, cadences, and Ideas are long remembered.
The ancients (people from ancient history) used anima, in fact, to describe breath as well as soul. That is wholly appropriate, for in the breath-the voice-of a character les its essential spirit. If
the writer can trily hear the voice of a character, so will the reader
The author writes, Ir the writer can truly hear the voice of a character, so will the reader. What type of statement is this? (10 points)
O imphat
mterrogative
O Explicit
Exclamatory