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  1. Full Title: Romeo and Juliet. When Written: Likely 1591-1595. Where Written: London, England. When Published: “Bad quarto” (incomplete manuscript) printed in 1597; Second, more complete quarto printed in 1599; First folio, with clarifications and corrections, printed in 1623. Literary Period: Renaissance.

  2. Analysis. Abraham Adams is about to part ways with Joseph Andrews when he makes a discovery—while he thought he was carrying nine volumes of sermons in his bag, in fact, Mrs. Adams replaced them with shirts. This means he and Joseph will be traveling in the same direction a little longer because Adams needs to go back to get his sermons.

  3. Even Yoseb has to concede that, with Isak imprisoned, the household is desperate for cash, so he allows Sunja to peddle kimchi in Ikaino’s open-air market, as long as Kyunghee does the cooking from home. When Sunja arrives at the market with her cart, the other ajumma s are rude to her. She’s relegated to an undesirable spot beside a butcher.

  4. Analysis. Hans and Liesel start to walk home, but they are stopped by a man who asks Hans if he has joined the Nazis yet. Liesel walks over and examines the ashes of the bonfire, which officials are shoveling away. At the bottom of the pile are three books that survived the blaze. The shovelers move away and Liesel rushes in.

  5. Analysis. The next morning, Lily is surprised to find herself alone on the Sabrina. After learning that Bertha Dorset has not yet left her room and that George Dorset and Ned Silverton left the yacht separately, Lily admires the view, taking pleasure in the beauty of the landscape. She feels that this invitation to go on a Mediterranean trip ...

  6. Mar 31, 2023 · Get the PDF, audio, and animated versions of this analysis and summary of Think Again and hundreds of other bestselling nonfiction books in our free top-ranking app. It’s been featured by Apple, Google, The Guardian and the UN as one of the world’s best reading and learning apps.

  7. Section 2 Summary: Oroonoko. Cormantien, the narrator tells us, is an African nation that acts as a trading post for slaves. It is a warlike country and has many slaves—people captured in battle—to sell. The King of Cormantien is an old man with many wives whom the narrator notes are beautiful, even though they are black.

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