Tuesday, July 14, 2015

In Sarah, Plain and Tall, why are Sarah's shells at the bottom of the food bag?chapter eight

In order to answer this question, we must think about what
we know about Sarah, and then make an inference about the shells at the bottom of the
bag.


We know that Sarah came from the East Coast. When she
first arrives, she brings presents from home for the children: a shell for Caleb and a
sea stone for Anna. She speaks lovingly of the sea. In Chapter Four, we are introduced
to Sarah’s shell collection.  She picks them up one at a time and names them. She shows
the children how you can hear the ocean if you hold a conch shell to your ear.  She
mentions the sea over and over again in the book.


We can
infer from this information that Sarah loves the sea and misses it very much.  We know
that her memories are wrapped up in her shells.  So in Chapter Eight, when we learn that
her shells are in the bottom of the bag in which she had put the snack she gathered, we
can infer that she ran to her room and grabbed them for safekeeping, just in case the
squall damaged the house.

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