The Devil In The White City Figurative Language

698 Words2 Pages

Chicago, one of the most popular cities in America. Visits from families all around the country, what makes this place so great? Is it the skyscrapers that protrude the sky? Or is it the weather people loved? Does Chicago being the second most favored city in America show that this town has some greatness? In the nonfiction novel The Devil in the White City, Erik Larson uses imagery, tone, and figurative language to portray the dreamlike qualities of Chicago and the beauty that lies within this city. Larson’s use of imagery causes the reader to picture the beautiful landscape of the fairgrounds before the fair becomes, which might make the reader wish they were apart of this scenery. Larson emphasizes people will see things they “have never seen before”. Like a “broad body of water extending into the horizon” (55) , making the reader feel as if …show more content…

The use of these strategies helps provide readers an astonishing image of the Chicago World's fair portraying the dreamlike qualities of the city. Larson depicts the beautiful qualities of Chicago through his choice of strategies. Using imagery, Larson helps the reader imagine what the location of the fair looks like before the fair becomes, its beauty and elegance of the horizon. He creates an optimistic tone to show the happiness the readers will have by the beautiful day that is brought along with the progression of the fair. With the use of figurative language, he personifies that the city is a lady and how much that “lady” has grown, from being nasty to being a beautiful masterpiece. All of these strategies combined make the reader imagine and want to see all of the amazing qualities Chicago has. Larson’s use of these writing strategies creates an image of the fair and the small but extravagant parts to make it the dreamlike qualities in The Devil in the White

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