Sunday, August 19, 2012

Setting


Setting in this book was a bit confusing at times. The author described the area where Clay Jensen visited quite well and I could see the location he was talking about in my head, but without the map of the town in the front of the book, I would have been confused about the streets and turns Clay was taking during the story. It was also hard to follow where Hannah Baker was recording or talking about in the the tapes, since there were two different settings that would occur on the same page. For example, Hannah would be talking about a house that she went to for a party, while Clay was sitting in a cafe that Hannah had visited earlier in the story. The clashing of locations between Clay and
Hannah was honestly hard to keep up with.
The time, however, was very well planned and interesting. It was intriguing to see how the different times of the stories fit together at the end of the book. The timeline of the setting was the best part of the whole story. I liked how people she had encountered earlier in the story had came back in the end and added a purpose in the story.
Map of the town in Thirteen Reasons Why

2 comments:

  1. The series was sorta fine until the end of the season 2, definite so far from reality its scary. If a Shooter carrying a loaded weapon wants to go inside a school...This series was so horribly left based. Any normal person would have called the cops. Instead this series showed they were= more worried about hurting the POS kid FEELINGS. Then the left wonders why this SH*T happens.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The series was sorta fine until the end of the season 2, definite so far from reality its scary. If a Shooter carrying a loaded weapon wants to go inside a school...This series was so horribly left based. Any normal person would have called the cops. Instead this series showed they were= more worried about hurting the POS kid FEELINGS. Then the left wonders why this SH*T happens.

    ReplyDelete