Saturday, October 3, 2009

Outside Reading

Slaughterhouse five started confusing, but now I can see it's a very good book. It's an anti-war book and I can see that because the character speaks like he is against war. So far, the book has been easy, and the reading has gone by smoothly. I just want to get it over with, so even if there are boring parts, I don't really mind. One reoccurring element is definitely tone. It is obvious. Within the first five pages you know it's obvious. The way he talks about war, he is totally against it. It was written like this because it is an antiwar book, and the main character isn't a real big fan of the war. The tone of the book is based on his opinions. He thinks the war is a horrible thing and he wants his readers to know that too.

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