Answer:
Hi!
The answer to this is option C.
Step-by-step explanation:
The effect of Wiesel’s choice to reveal Eliezer's age at the end of the excerpt is to shock readers, who may have forgotten just how young Eliezer was when experiencing the horrors of the concentration camps. When you are reading about a character witnessing things like "a son beating his father to death", seeing another person attacked, and then having this main character being placed next to two corpses, your mind instantly thinks that the main character must be old enough to witness these things. By highlighting the fact that Elizer is only 15 years old at the end of the horrible events being narrated, the reader has to stop and swallow that all of the horrible things they just read happened to someone who is not old enough to have witnessed. This element of shock is meant to make the readers think about the situation thats being described and empathize with the character.