Hostage by Kay Hooper summary:
Noah Bishop and his Special Crimes Unit are on the hunt for a man, who escaped from custody after hiding $10 million from a bank robbery, in Hostage, the second in a trilogy of related thrillers within this long-running series by Kay Hooper.
Cole Jacoby is on the run after mysteriously escaping from the custody of two agents, who have no memory of how he might have disappeared. Hole up in his cabin in mountains of Tennessee, agent Luther Brinkman is shot in the leg trying to apprehend him. Found by fellow agent Callie Davis, the need to work together to figure out how to bring Jacoby to justice.
Separately, Hollis Templeton and Reese DeMarco of the SCU are on a special, non-crime related mission to interact with spirits without the pressure of chasing the bad guys. They go to an age old mansion in Tennessee at the request of Anna Hamilton to try to communicate the spirit of Anna's husband, who had died years ago. They are completely unprepared, however, for what they discover during their investigation.
On the afternoon of that eventful day, I stood on the porch,
dumb, expectant. I guessed vaguely from my mother's
signs and from the hurrying to and fro in the house that
something unusual was about to happen, so I went to the
door and waited on the steps.
A. Conclusion
B. Conflict
Cu Climax
D. Exposition
Answer:
Exposition
Explanation:
He suggests they look for fingerprints on the pieces of glass holding the drawing.
B.
He starts right to work while Claudia takes time to plan.
C.
He complains when Claudia corrects his grammar.
D.
He wants to take the even-numbered files because there is one fewer.
Their seats were at one end of the front row; he had thought they would be less conspicuous there than in the centre, and he had not foreseen that the singer would walk over to him every time she came upon the stage. Her velvet train brushed against his trousers as she passed him. The applause which greeted her was neither overwhelming nor prolonged. Her conservative audience did not know exactly how to accept her toilette [dress].
first person
omniscient third person
limited third person
The answer is omniscient third person (the narrator knew the thoughts, actions, and feelings of both characters)
Answer:
Indirect characterization.
Explanation:
This type consists of the author showing the audience how the character is by his thoughts, words, and deeds. The author does this because in drama, unlike verse and epic, there is no narrator.
It takes more time to develop a character through indirect characterization but leaves a deeper impression in the audience or readers. It does this because the reader must make inferences about why the character act in a certain way.
I hope this answer helps you.