Night by Elis Wiesel

758 Words4 Pages
1/29/13 The Journey of Horrifying Nights In the past couple of weeks, as a class we have been reading and discussing the book Night written by, Elie Wiesel. It’s a nonfictional book, based on a real life story about, a young boy’s journey through the holocaust and how he survived. The significance of reading this book is that, younger generations need to read real life stories like this, so that they can learn the mistakes people made in the past and learn to correct or to prevent anything like the Holocaust from happening ever again. As humans, we all make mistakes and to prevent ourselves from doing and repeating mistakes, we should read and understand history so that we can figure out what went wrong and teach it to teach it to others so that they won’t also repeat the mistake in the future. In this book Elie Wiesel uses the figurative languages of Simile, Imagery, and Metaphor to enhance the reader’s experience while reading the book. Elie uses simile in his book, to compare objects that the readers can relate to and objects that have a deeper meaning to him, than anything else. Most of the similes in Night are examples that Elie uses when he is in Auschwitz with his father. The first example is, “physically, he was as awkward as a clown” (Wiesel, 3). In this quote the author is comparing Moishe the beadle, an outcast in the community of Sighet with a clown. His making this comparison because, Moishe was never liked by anyone in the village, he was like a clown because he was so unique and he didn’t fit right in the community. The next figurative language the author uses is imagery, which is where the author creates a picture in your mind using words. In this book, Elie uses imagery to give the readers a visual imagination of
Open Document