Characters
Events
Perspectives
Literary/Story Elements 1
Literary/Story Elements 2
100

The character who fires the gun (first and last name)

Michael Mackenzie

100

Michael fires the gun during this event/occasion

4th of July/Michael's 17th birthday

100

Jenna's feelings the first few days after her father's death

Numb/no feelings

100

Hints that the author gives to help the reader predict what is going to happen later

Foreshadowing

100

Briarwood, New Jersey

Setting

200

The girl whose father is affected by the shooting (first and last name)

Jenna Ward

200

The object that causes the tragedy (BE SPECIFIC)

.45-.70 Winchester Rifle

200

The primary emotion that Michael feels throughout the story

Guilt

200

Conversation between characters

Dialogue

200

Michael fires a gun, leading to the death of Charlie Ward, Michael's guilt, and Jenna's grief

Conflict

300

The man who is killed by celebratory gunfire (first and last name)

Charlie Ward

300

The reason why Jenna and her mother could not learn details of the shooting as soon as they expected

The ballistics team was working on another project.

300

The feelings that Josh's comments cause Michael to feel

Uneasy; suspicious; nervous

300

The author's interruption of the story to tell a brief story from the character's memory

Flashback/memory moment

300

The type of conflict most evident in the story

Characters vs. Self/Internal Conflict

400

Michael’s friend, who is with him during the shooting (first and last name)

Joe Sadowski

400

Michael's first "stone" he had to "swallow"

Burying/hiding the gun

400

Tom Mackenzie's feelings towards Charlie Ward's death

He feels that the situation was a stupid result of careless gun handling.

400

The author's use of deep detail to help the reader visualize what's happening in the story

Imagery

400

The type of point used throughout the story

Third-Person Omniscient

500

The character whose character development does not match their reputation (first and last name)

Amy Ruggerio

500

Michael's physical response when hearing of Charlie Ward's death

Vomit/throwing up

500

Meredith Ward's feelings revealed to Jenna concerning the death of her husband

She feels somehow responsible, like there was something she could have done differently to prevent it

500

The author's way of introducing the story and providing context to the main plot/conflict within the story

Prologue

500

The ink smudge on Michael's forehead after resting his head on the newspaper, the ice-cold temperature in the Wards' home, and all references to stones are all examples of...

Symbolism