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Conversion By Katherine Howe: Character Analysis

Decent Essays

The novel Conversion by Katherine Howe, published in 2014, is an incredibly gripping teen mystery that includes suspense, satire, and sadness all at once. The story centers around an all girls private school and its eerie similarity to the female hysteria during the colonial Salem witch trials. Howe, a descendent of three of the women accused of witchcraft during these trials, was interested in the topic of this time period and sought out to find a reasoning behind the accusations made upon the women. The novel varies its chapters and the timeline of the story between those set in the current time of 2012 and others taking place back in 1706. With these chapters switching back and forth, readers begin to notice the strange resemblance of the …show more content…

In my opinion, Howe did a phenomenal job starting and progressing with the plot of the novel but could have improved on providing a better conclusion to the novel. Many of the mini plots that arose in the novel never really got concluded and were left with gaps to fill, which I found irritating at times. Although the conclusion of the novel could have been more clear, I really enjoyed Howe’s writing style and how she incorporated interesting diction to make the reader think of what would happen next and how her sentence fluency was in a easy-paced and somewhat sequential order. Because of the alternating timelines, this novel provided me with good insight from multiple perspectives and point of views. This allowed me to understand the story in a way other character may perceive it as, similar to how “fiction seems to teach us to see the world through rose-colored lenses,” (Gottschall 2). As far as the similarity between the female hysteria in the past and the problems the girls had to face in the present goes, there really ended up being none, which I found

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