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Post by Madeleine Stewart on Aug 25, 2017 14:39:10 GMT -5
Constantly death brings up things that happen later on. They are in random places like one part mentions Liesel never kissing Rudy as long as they were both living. That foreshadows how when after Himmel street is bombed and Rudy is there dead Liesel finally kisses him. Why does death do this? Is it something a reader would see as no more than an exaggeration?
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Post by keelylipp on Aug 28, 2017 20:37:26 GMT -5
Death does this to keep the reader interested and involved. By hinting that Rudy dies in the duration of the novel, the reader's interest is piqued. In my case, I was curious about how Rudy died and what the effects were on everyone else in the story.
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Post by charlottepetryy on Aug 28, 2017 23:54:03 GMT -5
What the reader can get from death doing this is a prediction of what might happen but still a surprise or shock of what really occurs. It keeps the reader guessing while still implying things that are going to happen.
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Post by fuinduqimu on May 13, 2019 7:03:43 GMT -5
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Post by owahavaxo on May 13, 2019 8:53:06 GMT -5
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