Genre
Fiction
Setting and Context
The novel spans 25 years in the lives of twins who were deliberately separated from birth
Narrator and Point of View
The point of view is generally third person in that the narration seems removed from the emotion of one specific character
Tone and Mood
The tone is melancholy and nostalgic. The mood is hopeful yet at the same time fearful.
Protagonist and Antagonist
Caroline is the protagonist, David the antagonist
Major Conflict
There is conflict in the marriage of David and Norah constantly but much of the time the conflict is unspoken. They disagree on the fundamentals of life and more often than not David removes himself from the family dynamic. As Paul grows up he has verbal conflict with his father who criticizes him constantly and does not approve of his life or career choices.
Climax
Paul and Phoebe meet each other at the end of the novel.
Foreshadowing
David recognizes that Phoebe has Down syndrome which foreshadows his decision to institutionalize her.
Understatement
Norah feels that she never really knew David which is an understatement in that he never showed her the true version of himself or his life; he was hiding the existence of their child and also his "relationship" with her.
Allusions
The novel alludes to the parent-driven movement to have their children with Down syndrome included in mainstream schools.
Imagery
N/A
Paradox
Phoebe has a more "normal" and fulfilling life than Paul does, which is a paradox in that David's belief after finding the his daughter is mentally disabled is that she will never have a normal life, nor a long one.
Parallelism
There is a parallel between David's geographical distance from Phoebe and his emotional distance from Paul.
Metonymy and Synecdoche
The Downs community is the name given to all of the individuals making up the community of people who have a child with Down syndrome
Personification
N/A