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  • Essay / And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie - 1640

    Introduction: with thesis statementThe author Agatha Christie who wrote the novel And Then There Were None posed the theme of A powerful journey leading the main characters into a decision of survival and destiny, the way author Agatha Christie approaches different elements to show how this theme came to be is ironic. She uses this technique to draw the audience's full attention to how the mystery of this novel results in the disappearance of characters and will be the loss of the position. Agatha Christie is not your average author; it brings a point in the novel which is a very suspenseful sight which will grab your attention.Literary Analysis: StyleThe meaning of this novel title is that it tells the readers that this novel is a mystery of unsolved crimes, the elements that follow this style is the irony and the tone/mood the irony of this journey is the way the author breaks down different techniques to bring the readers to everyone's disappearance with the suspense of this island strange that sits with the suspense of this strange island that brings them each to conclusion of their tragic past, this novel is a perfect example of a guessing game. The tone/mood gives the novel a dark and sinister tone which gives a very dramatic mood to each event leading up to the main event which leaves only Vera, Philip and the judge left standing. “There was silence – complete and comfortable silence. Into this silence came The Voice. Without warning, inhuman, penetrating. . . "Ladies and Gentlemen! Silence, please! . . . You are charged with the following indictments” (Christie 84). The way each element enhanced the theme with...... middle of paper ...... the uncle of ...... once the little passage, she was there to watch the scene but as she wanted all the uncle's money, she acted as if she had not not seen the death of the little boy and Vera's first sight of Indian Island, which she finds sinister, hints at the trouble to come. The old man's warning to Blore on the train that the day of judgment is approaching. suggests that Blore will soon die; the poem "Ten Little Indians" sets out the pattern for the impending murders. Vera's fascination with the poem and the hook on her ceiling foreshadows her eventual decision to hang herself Works Cited Charlton, Nicola Christie. , Agathe. literary lives 1998. print. Christie, Agatha. New York: Harper, 1939. print. new: Harper Collins, 1997. printed.Stade,george. encyclopedia of british writers. print of 2003.