While some people are forced to read boring stories and articles for school assignments, most people chose to read for fun. The ideal book lets the reader escape their real life and temporarily transports them into an idyll situation. This novel does just that, and it allows the reader to feel like they are in the story with the characters. Mark Twain uses descriptive scenes and literary devices in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer to portray the 1800s American lifestyle, language, and community, creating a great American novel. Mark Twain’s extremely descriptive scenes contribute to the 1800s American lifestyle displayed in the novel. Early in the story, Tom Sawyer had a horrible toothache. While this may be a major concern for people …show more content…
Irony is masterfully used in many ways throughout the whole story, but this particular quote gives the reader a better understanding of Tom Sawyer’s Aunt Polly. “Infatuated with patent medicines… methods of producing health or mending it.” (Twain 89). Irony is one of the main literary devices in this scene and tells the reader more about Aunt Polly’s unique lifestyle. As religious as she is, Aunt Polly believes in natural medicine and healing remedies. She finds new ideas in women’s magazines that she tries on Tom, but they never end up working. Despite this, she still believes in natural medicine and does not use regular doctors. Irony creates humor in the story because most adults in this small town would have opposite …show more content…
Hyperboles are used in this story to exaggerate the character’s experiences. When Tom and Huckleberry Finn run away from the Temperance Tavern after finding Injun Joe’s passed-out body, Mark Twain chooses to greatly exaggerate his words. “Run! Said he; “run, for your life!”… Huck was making thirty or forty miles an hour before the repetition was uttered” (Twain 192). Realistically, running thirty to forty miles per hour is impossible. An exaggeration is used to make the scene more intense so that readers become hooked and want to find out what happens next. Twain uses this hyperbole to capture the boy’s fear in this spooky