All of these elements make up my story. The obituary foreshadows the death of this girl Hazel, but not telling the reader how she dies, simply stating things about her past life. The suicide note shows how Hazel died, killing herself. The note is the main part in the story later giving the evidence for the case showing how Jefery is not guilty when he goes to court. The text messages show how the people in the story communicate, and with text messages there is sometimes incorrect grammar for shortening your point. The text messages show the interaction with the different characters providing a part to the story. The note then showcases how quickly people take something back, the mother of Hazel was writing to Jefery to say sorry and that she did not mean to hurt him. …show more content…
Jerfery is later taken to court and with the appeal, and the evidence of the suicide note Jefery is innocent. At the end of the story there is a note to Jefery written by Jane Kerry, Hazel's mother apologizing to Jerfery, this is what we do as humans. We devalue someone's life based on something, and as soon as we figure that is wrong we take it all back. But it’s not that easy to forget. In each section or genre I did a piece of figurative language, In the obituary I said Hazel was like a ray of sunshine, getting the image across that she is a great person. This is a simile because it uses like. In her suicide note I used death is calling to me in a way I cannot avoid. That is personification because death is merely a figment of her imagination. In the text messages I only put one figurative language in out of all of them because no one really texts like that, using figurative language. In the text to mr. Ryan, Jefery’s lawyer Jefery claims that the cell calling his name, as a