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 how each passage supports its claims: determine whether the passage appeals to an authoritative example (a famous writer) or relies on personal anecdote.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage8.Passage A, unlike passage B, seeks to advance its argument by
Correct Answer
D
Passage A advances its argument by invoking a respected literary figure as support. For example: Shakespeare is a good model in this respect. He distorted the facts freely and knowingly conflated historical characters in historical plays. Yet such distortion makes the drama of human lives meaningful and memorable. That explicit citation of Shakespeare functions as an appeal to a venerated author. Passage B, by contrast, relies on first-person anecdote and reflection (e.g., As a writer of autobiographical texts, I'm always astonished at how falsely I remember things...) rather than citing an authoritative literary example.
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