Figurative Language In Marjorie Kinna's The Yearling

429 Words2 Pages
There are thousands of novels written every year, and only a select few win awards. It’s a competitive market, and the Pulitzer Prize is one of the toughest to win. Back in 1939 (wikipedia.com), The Yearling won this prestigious award. Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings deserved the Pulitzer Prize for her novel for many reasons, including her creative uses of figurative language, syntax, and sensory details. Her several uses of figurative language enhanced her writing by describing the situations in the novel in creative ways. Throughout the book she used many different types of figurative languages, and here’s an example. Paragraph three on page seven states, “The world was all a gentle gray, and he lay in a mist as fine as spray from a waterfall.”