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Analysis Of Janet And Geoff Benge's Lillian Trasher

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Analysis Of Janet And Geoff Benge's Lillian Trasher
When Janet and Geoff Benge wrote Lillian Trasher they did an excellent job of allowing the reader to see what they see by using descriptive words throughout the biography. When the authors were describing the sick baby they made sure the reader knew that the baby was unsightly by using the phrase “Lillian shrank back in horror” (Benge & Benge, 2004, pp. 59) when she saw the infant. The baby was so malnourished that the only clue that it was a human in the man's arms were the child’s eyes. Another example of when the author used descriptive words to allow the reader to see what they are seeing is the encounter with the sick family. Benge describes the family as “dressed in rags with sunken cheekbones and dull eyes” (Benge & Benge, 2004, pp.

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