Chasing the Monsoons Admission/Application Essay - 1. Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/english/1589205-chasing-the-monsoons
Chasing the Monsoons Admission/Application Essay - 1. https://studentshare.org/english/1589205-chasing-the-monsoons.
The aim of this essay is to identify examples of rhetoric in the book, culminating in a conclusion of the effectiveness in the use of this device by the author. Frater (1) describes the journey through the Silk Road as pleasant and enjoyable, with picturesque sceneries and all types of niceties. However, it is clear in the following sentences that the journey was nightmarish, with travellers being asked to offer residents handouts, failure to which garnet bullets were fired at them. In addition, the narrator uses rhetoric by criticizing Pakistan for not stabilizing the vertical cliff faces despite having vast mineral resources; instead, artists have put their work on the faces to show travellers the looming danger to which they are exposed.
He goes ahead and describes the artwork on the cliff faces as exquisite; a word one would use for an excellent thing, while knowing well that neither the art nor the message they portrayed was admirable. The narrator has a mania for finding pleasure even in times of misery, whereby he described the neck break speed at which they were travelling on the massively potholed road as if it were a pleasant experience. This is despite the danger that this put on their lives, the damage resulting on the vehicle, and the treacherous topography that could see them hitting a cliff face or rolling down a cliff below.
In addition, it is surprising how the narrator succeeds in noticing the beautiful scenery despite the hardships he was going through on that road, and the formula one speed at which the vehicle was travelling. This makes part of the story not to add up to the overall effect as the writer juxtaposed ideas, making it impossible to separate the real situation from his views. However, one thing is clear; the situation on the road was grim considering the events that he describes afterwards (Frater 1).
The part of the road covered with stones, potholes and streams was the part
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