Drill 2 · Reading · Literary Narrative
ACT Reading: Literary Narrative (Drill 2) is a Reading practice drill covering Literary Narrative. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.
Literary Narrative passages present fiction or memoir. This drill uses a memoir excerpt, with questions emphasizing how the narrator's tone and word choice convey attitude, a pattern that distinguishes Literary Narrative questions from the more purely informational questions in other ACT Reading passage types.
Question 1. The point of view from which the passage is told is best described as that of a:
Explanation: Choice A is correct. The narrator uses first-person pronouns ('I,' 'my') and recounts personal memories and experiences with Uncle Felix. The narration is retrospective, the narrator reflects on a period that has already passed. Choice B is wrong because the narrator is a participant, not an outside observer. Choice C doesn't work because the events are recalled, not happening in the present. Choice D falls short because the narrator does not have access to Felix's inner thoughts, only his observable behavior.
Question 2. According to the passage, Uncle Felix distinguished between translating and interpreting by explaining that interpreting involves:
Explanation: Choice G is correct. Uncle Felix explained that his job was not to translate 'word for word' but to 'carry meaning across', a distinction the narrator initially found trivial but later came to see as profound. Choice F describes translation as Felix defined it, not interpretation. Choices H and J introduce ideas of summarizing or selecting, which are not part of Felix's explanation.
Question 3. The narrator's observation that Uncle Felix's dismissive hand gesture meant 'something was being lost in translation' primarily serves to:
Explanation: Choice B is correct. Felix spent his career detecting gaps between words and meaning; the gesture while watching television shows that same sensitivity operating in his personal life. Choice A overgeneralizes; the passage does not say Felix dismissed all politicians. Choice C introduces the idea of returning to work, which is not suggested. Choice D misreads the scene; the narrator is interpreting Felix's gesture, not expressing disagreement with him.
Question 4. As it is used in the passage, the word 'unbidden' most nearly means:
Explanation: Choice G is correct. 'Unbidden' means offered without being requested or prompted. The narrator notes that Felix, a man of few words, volunteered this particular insight on his own, without the narrator asking. Choice F suggests reluctance, which is the opposite of volunteering information freely. Choices H and J describe manner rather than whether the information was requested.
Question 5. The final line of the passage, 'I was not sure whether he had been talking about interpreting at all', most strongly implies that:
Explanation: Choice B is correct. The passage builds toward this moment of recognition: Felix's advice about holding pauses, knowing the difference between a thinking pause, a grief pause, and a courage pause, maps directly onto the narrator's experience of divorce and emotional communication. The final line signals that the narrator has understood this. Choice A contradicts the passage, which clearly establishes Felix's long career. Choice C is not supported; the narrator arrives at understanding, not confusion. Choice D is possible but too specific and cynical a reading; Felix's silence throughout is respectful, not evasive.