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And Then There Were None Suspense Analysis

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Any good book needs to have suspense, especially a murder mystery. In the book And Then There Were None, written by Agatha Christie, there is a lot of suspense holding the reader at the edge of their seat. The book took place on Indian Island, where ten people were invited to visit for ten different reasons. That sentence alone creates suspense. The three reason why there is suspense in the book is the setting, changing the points of view, and eliminating the unknown character. The setting alone is suspenseful. The book took place on an island one mile away from the rest of society. Anything could have happened to the visitors and nobody would have known, which is why this was the perfect place to commit a crime. Another reason why the setting is full of suspense is because it was at a big mansion with many different nooks and crannies. Someone could be killed in one room and not be found until hours later because there would be so many places they would …show more content…

First, the changes is points of view creates doubt. A character could say something like “I was sleeping sat two in the morning,” when they were actually committing a murder. Similarly, the changing in points of view allows readers to point to different suspect. Vera suspected Dr. Armstrong to be the murderer, and there are many reasons why this makes sense. Yet, later Vera finds him dead and not the killer. “Two of the deaths have been poison. That rather points to a doctor. And then you can’t get over the fact that the only thing we are certain Mrs. Rogers had was the sleeping draught [Dr. Armstrong] gave her.” (Christie 104). The last reason why changing the point of view creates suspense is because it allows the reader to pick sides. A reader may pick their favorite character, and hoping or wondering how they might die, they will continue reading on Changing the point of view creates more suspense than most will

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