In a cartoon by Roz Chast, called “Shelved”, it shows a boy on a laptop sitting in a room full of books. All the books look at him sad faces while they watch him type away at his computer. The author shows irony by having the boy ignore all of the books and just focus on his computer. The books have faces of jealousy, fear, and anger as they watch him. They don't stand a chance against the laptop that can do almost anything the boy wants it to do. But a book is something that you can take and read whenever you want. There are books on every possible thing you can think of and reading them challenges your brain and teaches you to look deeper into things rather than having information handed to you from a
In a cartoon by Roz Chast, called “Shelved”, it shows a boy on a laptop sitting in a room full of books. All the books look at him sad faces while they watch him type away at his computer. The author shows irony by having the boy ignore all of the books and just focus on his computer. The books have faces of jealousy, fear, and anger as they watch him. They don't stand a chance against the laptop that can do almost anything the boy wants it to do. But a book is something that you can take and read whenever you want. There are books on every possible thing you can think of and reading them challenges your brain and teaches you to look deeper into things rather than having information handed to you from a