Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Similes in The Big Sleep Essay -- sleep
Similes in The Big Sleep      Ã     Ã  Ã   In response to Raymond  Chandler's The Big Sleep, I have just one question. Why all the similes? There  isn't a single page in the novel that doesn't display this annoying literary  device. Everything is "like this" or "like that." It never ends! Similar to  decoding a secret message that isn't difficult to understand, but nevertheless  tiring due to the overwhelming amount of messages, the novel is frustrating to  read. The following analysis acknowledges Chandler's creativity in developing  his main character, Philip Marlowe, with his usage of simile. However, the  excessive style of the novel creates a dominating force that ultimately leaves  the reader unfulfilled at the end.     Ã       Chandler goes into great detail describing the different  characters--most notably, the women. There are many sections where the shrewd  detective is quick to notice (and make analogous) certain physical features of  the Sternwood daughters; not that I blame him. Early in the novel he observes  Mrs. Regen's legs in the following manner. "They were visible to the knee and  one of them well beyond...The calves were beautiful, the ankles long and slim  and with enough melodic line for a tone poem" (17). I think that every guy  reading this book perked up when reading of Vivian's legs. In this sexual sense,  the similes work. Those long sentences would be much easier to read if there  were more comparisons of Vivian's legs to a "melodic line for a tone poem".     Ã       Carmen Sternwood is described with profoundness but in a  different (less sexual) sense than her sister is. Marlowe encounters her on many  occasions and is thorough in describing her--from her first flirtations to her  continuous irritations. In t...              ...be something similar to, "It was raining again the next morning, a  slanting gray rain like a swung curtain of crystal beads...I was as empty of  life as a scarecrow's pockets" (159). There is only so much of that a human  being can actually absorb.     Ã       And that is precisely why The Big Sleep is a novel that  has a hard time coming off as a pleasant reading experience. If the reader has  to sift through all the repetition of Marlowe's observations, then it subtracts  from the novels overall themes, which I believe are the most captivating parts.  Perhaps if it were a short story or if Chandler displayed mercy on our souls by  using similes lightly, then the novel would produce a stronger effect.     Ã       Works Cited     Chandler, Raymond. The Big Sleep. New York: Vintage Books,  1996.     Kemp, William. The Writing Process: Chandler 202. January  14, 1999     Ã                        
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