Answer:Walk Two Moons, with its unlikely, convoluted plot, its tender, humorous voice, and its exaggerated, satiric characterizations, is an example of an adventure or accomplishment romance novel. This is a novel in which the main character takes on a quest, endures suffering and must make a sacrifice, but emerges, often mentally or spiritually, triumphant. The adventure/accomplishment romance often centers on young adults, and a protagonist's quest, as in Walk Two Moons, and becomes his or her initiation into the adult world. Romances often use plot devices to represent or stand in for internal dramas, and the personalities of characters are condensed and metaphorical. Like most adventure/accomplishment romance heroes, who are usually male, Sal embarks on a risky journey from which she hopes to gain wisdom. Her main companions along the way—Phoebe in the novel's internal narrative and Gram and Gramps in the main narrative—provide humor with their inexplicable and uncontrollable behaviors, which also drive the tortuous plot.