6. If the prologue from the Invisible Man had been written as an argument instead of a work of fiction, what would the central claim be? Use your own words to state the central message
in the form of a claim.
7. When making an argument authors often try to appeal to their audience's emotions (feelings), intellect (logic), or sense of morality and justice lethics- what's right vs. what's wrong).
Which type of appeal is the author primarily using? How is he doing it?
8. How might the effect of this text have been different if the author had chosen to write a nonfiction argumentative text, instead of a novel? Why do you think that he chose to
communicate it through fiction instead of nonfiction?