

She looks skinny, with the bones of her chest exposed and her cheekbones hollow." In this example of visual imagery, Lockhart emphasizes the haunting quality of Carrie wandering in the dark by detailing how the moonlight accentuates her skeletal skinniness. She goes out onto the porch and discovers her aunt is also awake: "Aunt Carrie is on the walkway, heading away from me in her nightgown and a pair of shearling boots. One night during summer seventeen, Cadence finds she cannot sleep because of the winds rattling the windows. Heading Away From Me in Her Nightgown (Visual Imagery)

Unbeknownst to Cadence, the combination of bleach and wine is significant because it hints at how Carrie is dealing with her grief, simultaneously busying herself with obsessive cleaning and drinking to blunt her emotions. Cadence notes how her aunt gives a hug that is "too long and too hard, like she is trying to hug some deep and secret message," adding that Carrie "smells of bleach and wine." In this example of olfactory imagery, Lockhart enhances the realism of the scene by detailing the particular scents Cadence picks up on while being hugged.

Returning to Beechwood during summer seventeen, Cadence and her mother find Aunt Carrie in the kitchen of the rebuilt Clairmont house. Smells of Bleach and Wine (Olfactory Imagery) The bark of gulls." In this example of auditory imagery, Lockhart immerses the reader in Cadence's sensory experience by detailing the seaside ambient sound of waves mixing with the calls of birds. Cadence joins him, and the tense mood quickly shifts.

Buy Study Guide Hum of the Ocean, Bark of Gulls (Auditory Imagery)Īfter an argument in which he tries to convince the Liars to see Beechwood Island from a less-privileged perspective, Gat storms away from his mocking friends and wades into the water.
