Author's Note: I wrote this from what I understood because I think that the book is a little confusing.
The book Sarah Bishop is about a girl named Sarah Bishop, who used to live with her father and brother, Chad Bishop. After her own home being burned by the other side, and her dad being killed by having himself covered in tar. Her brother wanted to join the army, so he did, and so Sarah was all alone. She went on the perilous journey to try and find her brother, her only family member that remained alive, or so she thought.
The book Sarah Bishop is about a girl named Sarah Bishop, who used to live with her father and brother, Chad Bishop. After her own home being burned by the other side, and her dad being killed by having himself covered in tar. Her brother wanted to join the army, so he did, and so Sarah was all alone. She went on the perilous journey to try and find her brother, her only family member that remained alive, or so she thought.
Her point of view effects the way you look at the story because she is neutral, and she doesn't necessarily have a side that she's on. She's basically neutral because the war isn't her top priority, it's surviving. All she's worried about is making a life out in the woods and avoiding the soldiers that want to track her down.
If it were in the point of view of the soldiers, the war would mean everything to them, and it means everything to them to win. All they want is to have the land they were fighting for, and they don't care about Sarah as much as she doesn't care about the war.
This can influence you because it can show you that maybe you don't want to have a point of view, you just want to stay out of the war completely. It can make you not care about wars, or maybe become one of those people who want to live in the wilderness to avoid it. There's many scenarios that people might do because of this point of view.
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