How do the reader’s and Billy’s contrasting points of view affect the text?
Answers
Answer:
There are many points in this piece of writing which get affected by how the readers depict the situation and by how Billy depicts the situations for they shape up the upcoming story and text.
Example: Billy is found in an unfamiliar town; it is dark, and he needs shelter from the "deadly cold" of the air and the wind that is "like a flat blade of ice on his cheeks.
The Readers look at a cheerful picture of the Bed and Breakfast however later it turns into suspense.
Billy cannot seem to walk away and rings the bell without thinking in one scene and thus the readers feel that foreshadowing is hooking them further to the story.
Next, the setting puts Billy in the position to choose the quickest form of shelter available in a scene and later this gets shaped into further suspense. And the suspense begins, though, with the landlady's comment that Billy's room is "already ready" for him as he enters the house. This shapes the text that it leads Billy upstairs, she mentions that she is always read for someone who is "just right" causing the reader to wonder "just right for what?"
Later on,
Readers tend to wonder that why she boards men who are all similar, why she has had only three guests (including Billy) sign the guest book, and why Billy knows the names. This shapes the text in form of inquisition and suspicion.
Answer:
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