Cormac McCarthy's novel "The Crossing" Cormac McCarthy's "duplication", "Diction", "Simile" has a dramatic sequence described by a narrator. The authors use various methods to convey the influence of experience to the narrator. Some of these techniques are as follows. Repetition, similar to terms. Of the above techniques, the most obvious is iteration. The author uses the word "and" 33 times in total. However, it is meaningless to simply use words. This is a place of interesting words. In the text referring to the wolf, the word "and" is used in twenties
In Cormac McCarthy 's excerpt from The Crossing, this theme kills the wolf and is currently contemplating his feelings about this collapsed creature. His ideas are presented in rather complicated ways, many of them cancels each other, potentially confusing the reader. Fortunately, by using vocabulary, grammar, images, McCarthy helps to convey the influence of the situation experience on the hero. Dictation plays a major role in expressing the impression of the wolf's death (and the circumstances surrounding it) on this subject. From the beginning, the authors created a dramatic atmosphere by explaining the landscape as having "far end" (line 1) and "steep cliff". (2nd line) As the paragraph goes forward, enthusiasm for word selection is rising. The 57th and 58th lines explain this when the author says, "What are the blood and bones made from, but can not make any changes or wounds of war?" I will.
Suttree of Cormac McCarthy is a challenging reading. There is nothing easy for the reader in the novel. The words are very old, the words are often completely fabricated, and since symbolism comes from such a wide range of cultural resources it is almost impossible to understand. What is more difficult to understand than the literary tools used in the novel is the decision by Cornelius Suttree, the protagonist of the novel. And it gets even more irritated. A general strange and descriptive task presented by Suttree explains why this novel has never enjoyed popular readers and why it did not attract relatively critical attention Maybe. In a rough examination, this book gives the impression of a semi-comic story about poor alcohol-dependent fishermen who have suffered a legal conflict because of violent deterioration without reading or writing.
Since the late 1970's, Cormac McCarthy Society president Dianne Luce has written extensively about Cormac McCarthy. After having an excellent educational history at the Midland Institute of Technology in Columbia, South Carolina, he retired in June 2007 and became an independent scholar. She recently completed a manuscript on the history, culture and philosophical background of the work of McCarthy's Tennessee, published by the University of South Carolina Press. Wes Morgan recently retired from professor of full-time psychology at the Department of Psychology Clinical Training Program at the University of Tennessee. Since reading The Orchard Keeper for the first time in 1965, he has been interested in Cormac McCarthy's work and has written several papers on McCarthy's early life and works.