Genre
Children's literature
Setting and Context
An unnamed small town in Connecticut
Narrator and Point of View
The story is narrated in a third-person omniscient voice; the book is largely told from Maddie's point of view
Tone and Mood
The tone begins detached and matter of fact, though it becomes remorseful; the mood begins positive but becomes increasingly despondent
Protagonist and Antagonist
While it may seem that Wanda is the protagonist, Wanda is largely absent from the book, making Maddie the protagonist; Peggy is the antagonist
Major Conflict
The book's major conflict is that Maddie feels remorse for how she is helped cause Wanda Petronski to stop coming to school due to bullying.
Climax
The story reaches its climax when Miss Mason reveals that Wanda's father has pulled Wanda out of school and is moving to the city.
Foreshadowing
Wanda's empty desk foreshadows the eventual revelation that she has moved away.
Understatement
Allusions
Imagery
Paradox
Though it is seemingly absurd for Wanda to state that she has one hundred dresses, her claim turns out to be true when her drawings of a hundred dresses are revealed.
Parallelism
The lines from the Gettysburg Address that the class recites contain a parallel structure through the repetition of "the people": e.g. "government of the people, by the people, for the people."
Metonymy and Synecdoche
When the narrator suggests that "Room 13 should be very proud" of Wanda, Room 13 is an example of metonymy, as it is a substitute way of referring to the pupils in the room.