Sharp Objects Literary Elements

Sharp Objects Literary Elements

Genre

Mystery/Thriller

Setting and Context

Wind Gap, Missouri: the present day

Narrator and Point of View

Told through the point of view of narrator Camille Preaker

Tone and Mood

Mysterious, Violent, Solemn, Bleak, Sad, Exploitative, and Chaotic

Protagonist and Antagonist

Camille Preaker (Protagonist) vs. Amma and Adora Crellin (Antagonists)

Major Conflict

Camille's struggle to deal with her family drama -- and trauma -- while simultaneously dealing with her work assignment that took her to her hometown.

Climax

When Camille allows her mother, Adora, to "care" for her.

Foreshadowing

Amma's complicity in the murders of the girls is foreshadowed early on in the book.

Understatement

The number of people who support Camille after her hospitalization is understated.

Allusions

House of Leaves (2000), current events (Flynn was inspired to write the book by news stories about horrible murders and clearly alludes to real-life cases of murder throughout the book),

Imagery

Spiders are often featured in the book to represent how horrible Wind Gap, Missouri and its residents are.

Paradox

Spiders, which are almost always thought of as horrible-looking, are looked at as a thing of beauty and comfort when a person is being raped.

Parallelism

The stories of Ann Nash and Natalie Keene are paralleled in the book.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

Adora's mental illness is personified quite often in the book.

Update this section!

You can help us out by revising, improving and updating this section.

Update this section

After you claim a section you’ll have 24 hours to send in a draft. An editor will review the submission and either publish your submission or provide feedback.