Library/PT 154/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages say writers sometimes must change facts to make their work meaningful. Passage A says historical novelists invent dialogue and details so characters feel real; some deliberate, skillful "lies" help a story, while accidental mistakes hurt it. Passage B says people often misremember events, and these false memories can feel more emotionally true, so autobiographers may include them to show how they experienced life. Overall: writers often mix fact and fiction to convey meaning, and they should use careful, helpful changes rather than sloppy errors.

Logic Breakdown

Compare each author's view on factual accuracy versus narrative/emotional truth; choose the statement that both explicitly reject.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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12.

Both authors would be likely to disagree with which one of the following?

Correct Answer
E
Both authors reject the idea that readers expect complete factual accuracy. Passage A: 'The creation of a good narrative requires the telling of lies' and 'The spectrum of historical fiction is therefore not as simple as "accurate equals good" and "inaccurate equals bad."' Passage B: 'Lying is all but inescapable for a writer attempting to create an artistically coherent autobiography' and 'the trust a reader brings to reading an autobiography is a trust in a convincingly told tale, not the trust one brings to a newspaper article or a history of Assyria, in which aesthetics are secondary to factual accuracy.' These lines show both authors argue that narrative or emotional truth, not complete factual accuracy, governs readers' expectations in these genres.
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