An overwhelming irony surrounds the death of Ishmael Beah's
family in A Long Way Gone. All the while that Beah spends on the run, he
desperately wants to find his family. In every village that he and his friends encounter, Beah
first checks to see if his family has passed through the area. So, when Beah finally meets Gasemu
and learns that his family has been staying in a nearby village, he is overjoyed. Ironically,
when Beah arrives with Gasemu in the village, the rebels have beat them to it and have burned
down the entire village. No remains are found, but Gasemu tells Beah that his family had been
staying in a hut that is totally burned. This sad irony haunts Beah throughout the remainder of
his story.
Thursday, August 6, 2015
Whats an example of irony in A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
How is Anne's goal of wanting "to go on living even after my death" fulfilled in Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl?I didn't get how it was...
I think you are right! I don't believe that many of the Jews who were herded into the concentration camps actually understood the eno...
-
In another of Charles Dickens's signature coincidences, all of the major characters connected to the trial of Charles Darnay in Book ...
-
I cannot provide you with literary terms and their definitions, but I can identify six literary terms with examples, and give yo...
-
There is some variability in Islamic architecture, over time and country to country because there is heterogeneity even within a...
No comments:
Post a Comment