Copyright 2011 by Gary L. Pullman
The opening paragraphs of Chapters 1 through 20 of Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child’s Fever Dream (like the rest of those which introduce the novel’s other 60 chapters) use a variety of techniques to accomplish several purposes. As I have observed in previous posts concerning this topic, these techniques and purposes include:
- Setting the scene
- Using figures of speech, such as similes, metaphors, images, and personifications to create atmosphere or tone
- Involving the reader in the action
- Beginning the narrative in media res
- Creating a sense of immediacy (or “you-are-here”) for the reader
- Generating, maintain, or increase suspense
- Contrasting nature with civilization
- Linking action to characters’ emotions
- Identifying points of view
- Characterizing characters by associating them with particular places
- Introducing new or recurring characters
- Alluding to past events in characters’ lives
- Planting clues or red herrings
- Describing places important to the action or theme
- Linking one distant location to another, both of which are scenes of the story’s cosmopolitan action
- Creating, maintain, or intensify conflicts
- Posing rhetorical questions, both explicit and implicit, for the reader’s consideration
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