How Does Fletcher Create Suspense In The Hitchhiker

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Insanity is a terrifying idea for some people. The idea of one losing his hold on reality can lead to all kinds of fear. The Hitchhiker, written by Lucille Fletcher, is a very suspenseful story, following by the main character, Ronald Adams. Ronald tries to prove to the reader that he is not actually insane, but as he keeps noticing the mysterious events occurring he realizes that he is actually dead. Fletcher uses the elements of plot to create a play that is suspenseful. Fletcher begins to develop suspense through her exposition and rising action. The main character, Ronald Adams, starts by telling the audience that he is not insane hoping that they will believe him. However, Fletcher uses this comment to begin the suspense of her play. “All this I know. I know that I am, at this moment, perfectly sane. That it is not I who has gone mad—but something else— something utterly beyond my control,” said Ronald Adams (1001). He has left Brooklyn to …show more content…

He questioned himself all the way to New Mexico and decides to get out of his car and calls his mother back home in Brooklyn, and a strange voice picks up. He asks the lady where is his mother and the lady tells him that his mom is in the hospital from a serious nervous breakdown. He began to ask why she had a nervous breakdown and the lady told him that her eldest son Ronald had passed away from a fatal car crash. He knew right then and there the man that was falling him all alone was himself. In this suspenseful plot in Lucille Fletcher’s play The Hitchhiker, Ronald became very aware of how he knew he wasn't insane. Fletcher wanted to let the reader know that he wasn’t actually insane. To prove that Ronald wasn't insane she made a play to symbolize what is death like when it sneaks up on you. The suspense came from Ronald actions as he began to know he was dead from all the insanity that was