preview

What Is An Extended Metaphor Used In The Book Wild By Cheryl Bryson

Decent Essays

While ,Cheryl Strayed’s writing uses ad extended metaphor to represent her self-discovery in nature; Bill Bryson depends on using similes to describe his love for nature and his experience on how he wants to becomes a “mainly man”; since this is the case, they try to portray their reasoning for going in the woods and going on difficult trails. In Cheryl Strayed’s book Wild, Strayed writes in the first person about her reasoning for going into the wild. In the beginning, the author gives the reader her present state. After she gives the reader a glimpse of her past life she starts to uses an extended metaphor of how her life is compared to her present state. Strayed has lost her boot, “my boot was gone. Actually gone”. The boot represents her mother passing years before. Cheyl still has the other boot on, then thosses it, “I lifted it high and threw it will all my might”. Her tossing the other boot resembles her throwing her step-father and siblings out of her life, which she did after her mother’s passing. Cheryl uses an extended metaphor to show how her past life …show more content…

In Bryson’s story ,A Walk in the Woods Bryson uses similes, imagery and humor to describe his reasoning of going in to the woods. A Walk in the Woods has a tone of reverent which corresponds with his desire to venture into the woods. Bryson compares the Appalachian Mountains to a grandfather, “The AT is the granddaddy of long hikes”. By his comparison of the Appalachian Mountains to a grandfather gives the reader that mountains to him was like a matriarch of a family that was the foundation to all hikes that came after it. Another example of Bryson’s use of similes is when he compares himself to a “cupcake”, in other words a womanish man that has never seen nature, “I would no longer feel like a cupcake”. Bryson uses all this examples to inform the reader of his choice to venture onto woods and why that would make him a tougher

Get Access