Stan was sweeping up in front of the building. I tried to get past him without him noticing, but he noticed. “You don’t look sick,” he said, brushing a bunch of leaves into the street. I told him, “I feel sick.” He asked, “Where’s Mr. Feeling Sick going?” I told him, “To the drugstore on Eighty-fourth to get some cough drops.” Lie #3. Where I actually went was the locksmith’s store, which is Frazer and Sons, on Seventy-ninth.
How does the narration affect the reliability of the narrator?
A. The lie makes him less reliable.
B. He admits lying, so he is reliable.
C. His illness makes him less reliable.

Respuesta :

B he admits lying so he is reliable

The narration affects the reliability of the narrator because by indicating that he was lying, the narrator is considered to be more reliable. Option B.

Who is a narrator?

A narrator is a person via whose paradigm a story is being told or narrated.

Narrators can be reliable or unreliable. In this case, the narrator by virtue of his admission is reliable. Hence the correct answer is Option B. The premise here is that the more truthful a narrator is, the more reliable

Learn more about narrators at;
https://brainly.com/question/14305951
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