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Disabilities In Doerr's All The Light We Cannot See

Decent Essays

Disabilities are certainly no new element to novels these days with books such as The Fault in Our Stars and Wonder. However, those books have a single narrator telling about their disability. All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, tells half of the story with a blind narrator. That being, Marie-Laure, a young girl that grows up throughout the plot of the story. Doerr decides that he wanted a blind girl to be one of the two narrators and the decision makes sense. The novel is not revolved around her disease, instead, it is centered around her general relationships and decisions. Decisions that the reader knows will overlap with Werner’s life. The stance Marie-Laure would take if she was writen as a boy with sight is totally different. A boy with …show more content…

Likewise, the ability to see would have enabled the character to get rid of Von Rumpel when he invaded Etienne’s house. The relationship between Marie-Laure and Werner would have been changed if Marie-Laure was not written as that specific character. “He might have fallen in love,” states Volkheimer when he states what he believed Werner felt towards Marie-Laure (Doerr 503). If Marie-Laure was not a blind and innocent young girl, would Werner still love her? If she was not blind then she would not need Werner to help her get to safety. Instead, she would have been scared if she saw him most likely. For Werner was a German soldier in her home. The need of blind trust allowed for the end to come to a sealed ending. Marie entrusted Werner with the task of throwing away the “Sea of Flames” and for holding on to the key to the secret sea shore she used to go to. The trust and her gender helped her survive so that she could end the novel. Werner once responded to the worries Marie-Laure when she thought she would have been shot if she walked down the street where Werner claimed was safety. He assures her with, “Not with that white

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