Cloudstreet Essays

  • The King Of The Castle Setting Analysis

    958 Words  | 4 Pages

    Each setting is carefully chosen by Susan Hill in her novel “The King of the Castle”, to present different incidents and their effects on the characters. Throughout the novel, there are many references to the settings, which contribute to the mood and the atmosphere of a scene, as well as the readers’ response. The two main contrasting settings used are Warings, Hooper’s home, and Hangwood, which is woodland on the west of the house. The novel is mainly set in Warings. For some of the characters

  • Crossing The Desert Narrative

    739 Words  | 3 Pages

    From Mexico to Arizona Have you ever been so tired that you feel every bone in your body is about to break? “Don’t stop, keep going because something great is waiting for us on the other side,” my mother kept reminding me while crossing the desert. Crossing the desert to come to the United States was the hardest thing I had to do. This was not optional since I was barely seven; it was necessary if we wanted to survive. While crossing the desert may seem easy, it is challenging, dangerous, and

  • Cloudstreet By Tim Winton

    755 Words  | 4 Pages

    In Cloudstreet, Tim Winton relays the various struggles of the Pickle and Lamb family who have had little moments worth celebrating; however, the beginning of the chapter Wax Harry is about the birth of Rose’s son, who Fish wants to name Wax Harry, due to the waxy appearance of the newborn baby. The arrival of the baby brings the two families together and leaves them all in merriment. Diction, figurative language, imagery, point of view, and sentence structure- these are elements that contribute

  • Rose Pickles Hate Her Mother Analysis

    635 Words  | 3 Pages

    of grog and sweat and strange men. She hated her mother’s abuse and torments. She hates her mother because her mother hates her. But above all, she hates her mother for not even trying to change for Rose, for Sam, for Chub and Ted. She’s out of Cloudstreet now, away from it all, but Rose knows she’ll hate Dolly until the day she’s six feet under. Rose scares herself by how much she actually can hate. She is appalled at herself for not loving her mother at all. Was she just as bad as the Old Girl