Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Blog #5 - David Sedaris

“I thought briefly of swallowing my watch, but there was no guarantee I’d choke on it. It’s embarrassing, but, given the way I normally eat, it would probably go down fairly easily, strap ad all. A clock might be a challenge, but a Timex the size of a fifty-cent piece – no problem.” This passage all begun with a miscommunication between a French nurse and David in the hospital. He did not understand the instructions given to him, so he took off his clothing and then thought to go out in the waiting room with only his underpants on. This obviously being the wrong option, David had looked like a fool sitting beside a very-well dressed French couple. The first option he comes up with is to go back to his dressing room, where the robe he should have put on is still hanging on the rack. He then thinks of his second option suicide. This leads to David thinking of swallowing a watch to commit suicide. It is a very humorous and quirky passage, but provides the reader with very graphic image.

David Sedaris uses many hyperboles in his writing, in order to make certain things exaggerated and funnier to the reader. Examples include: When he was describing his experience in the waiting room, it is an exaggeration to have the thought of suicide at that moment. As well when David would always say ‘D’accord’ for everything as a solution to speak to French people, is obviously an exaggeration. Another literary device used is by David’s point of view and what he sees in detail around him. “My mother set the picnic table with insect-repelling candles, and just as w started to eat she caught me eating a huge chunk of beef the size of a coin purse.” He describes the setting of this picnic in a simple sentence, but gets the point across of how the table is set up and the large piece of beef he is eating.

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