"The Smile" by Ray Bradbury is an example of this type of fiction.
Dystopian
The person who tried to return the sun before Bao Chu.
Bao Chu's father
The Glader assigned to show Thomas around when he arrives.
Chuck
I'm so hungry; I could eat a horse.
Hyperbole
The punctuation mark used to indicate dialogue.
What Josh is carrying on the bus in "The Trickster."
A coyote skull
"Bao Chu's Search for the Sun" is an example of this archetypal story.
The Quest
The creatures that the Creators use to spy on the Gladers.
Beetle Blades
He's a snake.
Metaphor
The way to indicate the start of a new paragraph.
Indent
The murder weapon in "Lamb to the Slaughter."
Leg of lamb
The story archetype in which the main character undergoes a significant transformation.
Rebirth
Gally is the keeper of this group.
Builders
The three types of irony.
Verbal irony, dramatic irony, situational irony
The punctuation mark used to connect two independent clauses.
Semi-colon
Person vs. Society
The animal companion that helps Bao Chu on his journey.
The name of the W.I.C.K.E.D. director that the Gladers meet at the end of the novel.
Ava Paige
The wind whooshed past my face.
Onomatopoeia
The page at the end of your work that lists your sources in MLA format.
Works Cited
The year in which "The Smile" takes place.
2061
The names of Scarface's grandparents.
Sun and Moon
Three of the six code words that the Gladers discover at the end of the novel.
Float, Catch, Bleed, Death, Stiff, Push
The two types of third-person point of view.
Limited and omniscient
The grammatical error that involves incorrectly using a comma to connect two independent clauses.
Comma splice