Genre
Biographical novel
Setting and Context
The action takes place starting at the end of the 19th century and then up until the middle of the 20th century. The action also takes place in America, in various states and cities.
Narrator and Point of View
The story is narrated from a third person objective point of view. At times, the narrator includes letters written by the brothers or by other family members or close friends and those letters are written from a first person subjective perspective.
Tone and Mood
The tone used is detached and neutral.
Protagonist and Antagonist
The protagonists are the two Wright brothers but there are no antagonists in the real sense of the word.
Major Conflict
The major conflict was between the two Wright brothers who wanted to come up with a flying device and the skeptics who could not believe that a flying device would have any practical purpose.
Climax
The story reaches its climax when the brothers are successful in building a flying apparatus in December 1903.
Foreshadowing
When the author talks about Ohio and mentions it as being the birthplace of many great thinkers, he foreshadows the way in which the Wright Brothers will rise to fame and will become known all over the world for their invention.
Understatement
When Admiral George Melville and Simon Newcomb claimed flying would have no real purpose was an understatement as it was later revealed how useful it was and how much humans benefited from it.
Allusions
It is alluded that the head of the Smithsonian Institute wanted to recruit the two Wright brothers to help him build a flying machine but the allusion remains unconfirmed.
Imagery
In the first chapter of the second part, the narrator presents another experiment carried by the head of the Smithsonian institute. He funded a flying machine which had a motor but after flying only 1000 feet, it crashed into the river. The next day, the newspapers mocked the experiment, calling the airship a submarine. The image of the headlines makes the reader understand just how ruthless the media was and how quick they were to judge someone who has failed.
Paradox
One of the paradoxes in the book is how the brothers succeeded in building a successful flying machine without depending on funds from the outside. In comparison with many people who had their experiments funded, the brothers insisted they pay for everything themselves. Surprisingly, despite this, the brothers succeeded in building a successful flying machine while the rest failed to do so.
Parallelism
N/A
Metonymy and Synecdoche
The term glider is used in a general way to make reference to any type of device built for flying. The term would later be replaced by various other more specialized terms and words.
Personification
N/A