Holly Literary Elements

Holly Literary Elements

Genre

Mystery-Horror

Setting and Context

A small town in the American Midwest

Narrator and Point of View

The novel is told from the perspective of Holly Gibney, the novel's protagonist.

Tone and Mood

The tone is suspenseful, dark, and gritty. The mood is tense, foreboding, and gloomy.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Holly Gibney is the novel's protagonist and the Harris' are the antagonist.

Major Conflict

The major conflict of the novel revolves around Holly's struggle to determine why Bonnie had disappeared—and later, who kidnapped her.

Climax

When Holly discovers that Rodney and Emily Harris, two esteemed professors, are responsible for Bonnie's disappearance.

Foreshadowing

King uses foreboding language when describing the Harris' home to foreshadow their involvement in Bonnie's disappearance.

Understatement

The importance of Holly's usual partner is understated early on in the novel because she is able to figure out the case by herself.

Allusions

King alludes to his previous novels featuring Holly Gibney, history, religion, mythology, and the dark arts.

Imagery

King consistently utilizes dark and horrific imagery when describing Rodney and Emily Harris and their abilities.

Paradox

The Harris' seemingly have everything going for them, but throw their lives away for something they knew they could never achieve.

Parallelism

n/a

Metonymy and Synecdoche

MAGA = the movement run by Donald Trump called "Make America Great Again," which carries racist connotations in King's novel.

Personification

The Harris' home is personified in the novel and is given human-like characteristics.

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