Answer Explanations
SAT Practice Test #8
Section 1:
Reading Test
QUESTION 1
Choice A is the best answer. The first paragraph explains the
narrator’s love of reading: “Even then my only friends were made of
paper and ink. . . . Where my school friends saw notches of ink on
incomprehensible pages,
I saw light, streets, and people.” The fourth
paragraph reiterates this love in its description of the bookshop as
a “sanctuary” and “refuge.” The shift in focus occurs in the last six
paragraphs, which recount the gift of
a book that transforms the
narrator’s love of reading into a desire to write: “I did not think there
could be a better [book] in the whole world and I was beginning
to suspect that Mr. Dickens had written it just for me. Soon I was
convinced that I didn’t want to do anything else
in life but learn to do
what Mr. Dickens had done.” Thus the passage’s overall focus shifts
from the narrator’s love of reading to a specific incident that influences
his decision to become a writer.
Choice B is incorrect because the passage never focuses on the
narrator’s father, who primarily serves to illustrate the narrator’s
determination to read books despite all obstacles.
Choice C is incorrect
because the passage focuses on the narrator’s desire to write rather
than on whatever skill he may have as a writer. Choice D is incorrect
because the passage doesn’t make the narrator’s childhood hardships
its central focus or analyze the effects of those hardships.
QUESTION 2
Choice C is the best answer. In
the first paragraph, the third sentence
describes the narrator’s love of reading (“where my school friends saw
notches of ink on incomprehensible pages, I saw light, streets, and
people”), and the fourth sentence describes the
role that reading played
in the narrator’s life (“a safe haven from that home, those streets, and
those troubled days in which even I could sense that only a limited
fortune awaited me”). The remainder of the
passage recounts incidents
in which the narrator’s actions arise from his love of, and dependence
on, reading. Thus the third and fourth sentences can be seen as
describing a passion that accounts for those actions.
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Choice A is incorrect because although the narrator’s “school friends”
are mentioned in
passing in the third sentence, they aren’t introduced
as proper characters and make no further appearance in the passage.
Choice B is incorrect because the passage doesn’t list the difficult
conditions of the narrator’s childhood until after these sentences.
Choice D is incorrect because the narrator’s aspirations aren’t
discussed until the last paragraph of the passage.
QUESTION 3