It is the feeling of anticipation that captivates the reader to continue reading. “Papa let’s not go up there. It’s okay. I don’t think we should go up there. It’s okay. (106)” McCarthy uses short and simple sentences to draw the reader's attention to the urgency and foreboding feeling of apprehension that the boy is feeling in regards to the house. In this passage there is dialogue between the father and the boy, reminding the reader that something is wrong. Which allows the reader to have an insight of the feeling. “Then he raised the hatch door and swung it over and let it down on the floor behind. (110)” Throughout the novel Cormac McCarthy leaves the reader in suspense by not giving the facts to the reader right away. The quotation above is the perfect example of such, it goes into detail on the hatch door and following it with more dialogue leaves the reader discomfort by not telling them what is behind the hatch right away. “He would have ample time later to think about that (107)”. This quotation is yet another example from the novel that builds an immense feeling of suspense, that Cormac McCarthy uses to allow the reader to experience. With suspense in the passage we are allowed to have a more clear understanding of the atmosphere of the
It is the feeling of anticipation that captivates the reader to continue reading. “Papa let’s not go up there. It’s okay. I don’t think we should go up there. It’s okay. (106)” McCarthy uses short and simple sentences to draw the reader's attention to the urgency and foreboding feeling of apprehension that the boy is feeling in regards to the house. In this passage there is dialogue between the father and the boy, reminding the reader that something is wrong. Which allows the reader to have an insight of the feeling. “Then he raised the hatch door and swung it over and let it down on the floor behind. (110)” Throughout the novel Cormac McCarthy leaves the reader in suspense by not giving the facts to the reader right away. The quotation above is the perfect example of such, it goes into detail on the hatch door and following it with more dialogue leaves the reader discomfort by not telling them what is behind the hatch right away. “He would have ample time later to think about that (107)”. This quotation is yet another example from the novel that builds an immense feeling of suspense, that Cormac McCarthy uses to allow the reader to experience. With suspense in the passage we are allowed to have a more clear understanding of the atmosphere of the