Readers who do not have "black females" can consciously remind the Gothic readers who do not consciously have black women, and can doubt their conscious arousal of Gothic. It is full of themes and effects related to this genre. How far do you have a statement about this novel? There is no doubt that Susan Hill consciously awakens Gothic among "black women". She used many obvious customs to produce a wonderful Gothic effect throughout the novel.
Paranoia: a feeling that something is completely incorrect, it makes the readers uneasy, they suspect their environment and when it is fully functional it will doubt their own beliefs or concepts of the world . This fear is very helpful for building a slow sense of tension and psychological horror stories. Fear: This fear is a terrible feeling that bad things happen. When the reader gets to know the story and pay attention to its role, that fear is very effective and you can worry about the bad things that happen to them. Because stories need to do a lot of work to involve readers and keep them involved, it is difficult to arouse horror in readers, but it is a powerful fear.
If you have any doubts, please have a secret card reader. Yancy is a continuum of monogamy and he just began to tell the story of a tripartite relationship between men and women. She ends the story with a woman's relationship. I do not want this story to show Yancy like 'greedy bisexual', but I do not want to react her to purest in response to this stereotype. Sensitive readers gave me advised wise and good advice. By the way, there is nothing wrong with purity and genuine.
Shirley also wrote her books based on the story, but the reader did not know about when the event occurred, who told the story, and who imagined it. With a black woman, Hill did all the work for us. As she wrote a story and imagined how it was looking at us, the reader left a work that lacked her imagination. Then she can give us more work of criticism, correction and improvement. She conveyed her idea to the actor, so the actor must imagine how she imagined her role. Oh, this is very hard!