Is it What You Thought In the story, “The most dangerous game” by Richard Connell, Winston and his friend Rainsford are heading off on their yacht when unexpectedly Rainsford drops something overboard. When he goes to pick it he falls over the side and drifts away from the boat so he has to swim to shore. He finds himself on a mysterious island with a hidden secret. Turns out he and there General have a lot in common such as hunting well sort of. Turns out General Zaroff hunts people for a challenge when rainsford found out he was shocked. Then it all turns for the worst when the General wants to hunt him. Rainsford was one of the lucky ones he outlast Zaroff and in turn kills him.Throughout the story, Connell uses Irony, Suspense, and Foreshadowing …show more content…
When Winston points out “The place has a reputation a bad one”(Connell 66). It is helpful because later he finds out what is bad. What was bad was exponential and played a outcome in the ending, to the story and to Rainsford.
Suspense is used when the narrator is talking through the character's mind during the first hunted scene and Rainsford had made a fake trail for Zaroff to follow and get lost. Well Zaroff didn't get lost he followed it to his location when he found him he laughed and walked back to his mansion. Before Zaroff had found him the narrator scarcely says “Something was coming through the bush, coming slowly carefully coming the same winding way Rainsford had come”(Connell 79). This best explains suspense because the narrator slows down time and gives great detail. Also you don’t know what is going to happen next. Irony is used when Rainsford is hiding in the trees and hears Zaroff, Ivan, and the dogs. Rainsford thought “All he knew was that he was safe from his enemy, the sea”(Connell 70). This is a good example of Irony because he says something that he meant another. Also his real enemy is Zaroff, Ivan, and the dogs. And the sea turns out to be good because it helps him escape off the island and get to Zaroff’s mansion and kill him, so the sea turns out