Vampires in the Lemon Grove Irony

Vampires in the Lemon Grove Irony

Situation Irony: Fila’s death

Fila’s death is ironic because it references the temptation that Eve succumbed to in the Garden of Eden.

Verbal Irony: Being a vampire

Magreb dispels all notions of typical vampire traits early on in the story – such as the need to sleep in the coffin, evade sunlight, and drink blood.

Situational irony: Clyde’s bloodlust

It is ironic that Clyde uses the lemon grove as a way of keeping his bloodlust at bay, but at the same time, he allows Fila, a human temptation, to keep working on the grove.

Situational irony: Fila

Fila is ironically a reference to the apple in the Garden of Eden – she is the one fruit in the grove that Clyde cannot resist.

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