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The Importance Of Setting In Blood Red Horse

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The setting creates challenges and opportunities for characters. For example when Ellie was left vulnerable and when the climber in the poem “Ascent” has finger pain. In all different genres, setting affects the text whether it’s physical challenges or emotional challenges.

In the novel Blood Red Horse, the author, K.M Grant, uses the setting to add conflict, challenges, and opportunities to the story. In Blood Red Horse the setting, which is in the time of the crusades, affects the character Ellie as it leaves her defenseless. In Blood Red Horse, the author writes, “ ‘I do know you can no longer marry Gavin De Granville. This means you will be fair game for knights on the prowl’ ”(248). Because the setting takes place in a time of war Ellie …show more content…

The climber has one place to go, to the top, this is an opportunity to prove everyone wrong, and smash all the lies people were telling him. In the poem, the author writes, “They tell you to never look down\The average climbing rope is 50 meters long\And rated by the numbers of falls\It can withstand\Because\It is expected that you are going to lose your grip”(2-7).This shows that no one believes in him. When the author writes, “it is expected”(7), he implies that everyone else thinks that. When Michael Salinger writes, “But not your fingertip pain\Trigger loaded cams\Sway at your waist\Like a cluster of colored pendulums\Picked one by one\Inserted into fissures and cracks\Then left behind\As if they were antique keys\Poking from an attic’s trunk\And you look up\ Because you’ve been warned to never look down Feeling for imperfections in the rock\Facilitating enough friction “ (20-35). The setting, a cliff, is creating a physical challenge as well. The climber is having fingertip pain because the cliff is so rough and jagged. The challenges in the poem “Ascent” by Michael Salinger, are not like the challenges in the story Same Sun

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