When the water points opened he had washed up, then bought an old shirt from another stall, and some weedcrackers, and ate them while he walked. Then he headed downtown, out of the district, keeping moving. He had run, but he had run smart, going to the flea market in Madison Square first and waking up one of the guys who slept under his stall and buying sandals. So he had the loot, and loot was all you really needed. he had sewed all his money into them because he was afraid of losing it out of his shoe. What if he had to leave everything behind? He had put his shorts on, and just the day before. Hadn’t the cops come when he was out of the apartment-wasn’t that luck? And he had gotten away without being seen, that was luck too. Sometimes he would forget it for a while and the shakes would come back and he would have to start thinking all about the luck again. To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:ġ4 Even though the cops knew who he was and were after him, luck was on his side, that’s what Billy Chung kept telling himself. Ehrlich himself acknowledged the importance of Make Room Make Room in an introduction that ran in some 1970s editions of that book: Make Room Make Room presents a gripping scenario of where current trends may be. What reading level is Make Room! Make Room! book? Notably, his novel came out two years before Dr Paul R Ehrlich’s bestselling book of alarmist nonfiction, The Population Bomb.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |