Walls’ establishes two very diverse tones, by telling two different stories of her parents. One is being a happier time and her not realizing the financial troubles of her family, creating a tone of innocence. As she grew up, she then realizes these financial problems and the tone becomes judgmental. The narrator gets you on side, by trying to help her parents in the best way she knows how. In my opinion, when the narrator was much younger it is easier for the reader to be on her side, because it describes the parents as people who truly cared about family values. The narrator does use tone and words to idealize her parents when she was younger. However, you see her true personality as she grows older and is embarrassed by her parents, and how they live on the streets.
The author is masterful in her diction, as illustrated by the following examples; “I’d tried to make a home for myself here, tried to turn the apartment into the sort of place where the person I wanted to be would live. But I could never enjoy the room without worrying about Mom and Dad huddled on the sidewalk grate somewhere.” This passage intrigues the reader, as it creates an image of poverty and wealth. There is an interesting transition, between her description of her wealth and her parents’ lives on the street creating a vivid contrast of two different lifestyles. Curiosity is aroused by this passage. “I looked up to the stars and tried to figure out which was the best one. You could see hundreds, maybe thousands or even millions, twinkling in the clear desert sky. The longer you looked and the more your eyes adjusted to the dark, the more stars you’d see, layer after layer of them gradually becoming visible.” This passage can really make you imagine that you had been there looking up at all the beautiful stars and realized that the simplest things in life can astonish you.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
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