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Most Dangerous Game

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Most Dangerous Game
Suspense of in "The Most Dangerous Game" Suspense is when the reader anxiously want to know more but the author waits to give them further information. In "The Most Dangerous Game", by Richard Connell, suspense is used in many situations. A big-game hunter named Rainsford, who is from New York, falls aboard and swims to the island. He gets trapped on the island of a sadistic fellow hunter General Zaroff, who bored with conventional prey, has come to see humans as the only quarry worthy of his skill, hunting man. Plays his hunting games with Rainsford. Connell creates suspense through grammar, cliffhangers and holding the resolution until the last sentence. Richard Connell uses grammar to create suspense. For Rainsford, when he was in the water had no other choice than to follow the gunshots he had heard, which bought him to the mansion of General Zaroff. While discussing about the dangerous animal on island, Rainsford asked if it was tiger, the General gives him clues about what animal it was. At the point when Rainsford understand the games being played on the island, he says, "'But you can't mean - ' gasped Rainsford"(21). The author uses grammar to create suspense at this situation because he restricts the reader from knowing what Rainsford knows for which he uses hyphen. Finally Rainsford says, '"Hunting? General Zaroff, what you speak of is murder"'(21). Then the reader understands the animal Zaroff hunts is man. This time Connell uses cliffhangers to create suspense. When the game was being played between Rainsford and the General, the General brought Ivan and his dogs to look for Rainsford. Rainsford thought of a native trick he learned in Uganda. He uses the trick and starts running again, after a while he thought to climb up a tree to see the result of his trick. Rainsford panicked and saw a blue gap between the trees. The author mentions, "Then he leaped far out into the sea. . . . "(30). Rainsford got into the

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