Figurative Language:
Simile
Figurative Language:
Personification
Tone & Mood
Author's Craft:
Memoir & Allusion & Precise Language
Make
an
inference
100

The author uses a simile in paragraph 5. What two things are being compared?

Clouds to batter

Clouds to an avalanche 

100

What non-human thing is acting human, and what human action does it do?

The river is personified; it “talks.”

100

What is the Tone shift that occurs in this story?

Reflective to Suspenseful/intense

100

Name TWO memoir signals you can find in this excerpt.

First-person (I/me/my)

Reflection

Real place/ Real time

Intense sensory details

Writer's inner thoughts

100

Based on the storm details, what can you infer about how dangerous the situation is?

Very dangerous!

Flooding/wind/lightning & urgency suggests real danger.

200

Pick ONE storm simile and explain what it suggests about the storm (in your own words).

“like a dark gray avalanche” suggests it’s fast, overwhelming, impossible to stop.

200

What feeling does the personification create between the narrator and the river?

Connectedness

"Like a buddy"

200

Memoir authors often share their feelings and reactions. How does sharing feelings affect tone?

Makes the voice personal, reflective, and “real." Like the author is sitting at a campfire telling you a story.

200

A writer alludes to Thor during a storm scene. How would you visualize the storm?

Loud

Powerful

Intense

Strong

200

Infer why he needs shelter, not land, immediately instead of waiting it out in open water.

Reaching land is unsafe right now, so he chooses immediate shelter.

300

Similes help us visualize and feel the scene. What image do you “see” from the simile about the rain approaching?

"Like army scouts"

I feel the drizzle before a big storm in the summer.

300

“Then the river whispered, ‘Get ready. Get ready.’” 

What does this personification do for the scene?

It builds suspense. Nature feels like it’s warning him.

300

Pick ONE detail from the storm section and name the mood it creates (and why).

Suspenseful/tense/dangerous because the details show risk and intensity.

300

Allusions have implied meaning (connotation). What is the implied meaning of referencing Kryptonite during a fight scene?

It implies a weakness or vulnerability to a very strong character. 

300

Paragraph 4 is a "turning point" in the excerpt. Why would a turning point matter in a storm story? 

It’s when things shift from calm to dangerous; it changes the mood and adds the danger.

400

Similes can shape mood. Choose ONE simile from the storm scene and name a mood word it supports (and why).

Suspenseful/tense/dangerous 

The comparisons make the storm feel unstoppable.

400

Name TWO figurative language moments from the storm scene and explain how each builds suspense.

"like army scouts." (Simile)

Scouts come before the army.

"Then the river whispered, 'Get ready. Get ready.'" (Personification)

A warning from nature.

400

What is surprising about his feelings in Paragraph 10-11, compared to what most people would feel?

He’s calm/amazed instead of panicked; that contrast stands out. (Juxtaposition)

400

Precise language helps readers picture exactly what’s happening. Rewrite this vague idea using ONE vivid verb + ONE specific detail: 

“Trees made noise in the storm.”

The oaks groaned as the storm violently shook them.

400

The background info says Harris was a “city dweller” and “unprepared” for the trip. What can you infer about why the trip is risky for him?

He may lack experience with wilderness/river dangers. This makes him have a higher chance of making mistakes.

500

The text includes a metaphor too, “far curtain of the insulated air”. 

Explain what that metaphor helps you picture.

Warmth trapped behind a barrier. The air feels sealed off like a curtain.

500

If you removed personification, the river would feel like “just water.” Explain how the meaning would change if the river did NOT seem alive.

The scene becomes less emotional/less suspenseful; the river stops feeling like a character/guide.

500

Overall mood can be supported by evidence. Choose TWO sentences from the excerpt that best support the overall storm mood and explain why each one is strong evidence.

"No sooner had I ducked into the trees than the sky split open with a loud crash and a splintery crackle of lightning." (Paragraph 8)

"The canoe was twisted about, and water poured over the side." (Paragraph 10)

500

In Mississippi Solo, the author alludes to “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” with “Water, water everywhere…”.
What idea does this allusion add to the storm scene?

Even though water is everywhere, it’s not helping. It’s part of the danger/trap, making the moment feel desperate/perilous.

500

Infer ONE reason he chooses a journey like this (beyond just “for fun”).

Escape routine

Feel alive

Learn about himself

Connect with nature

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