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How does the author build suspense in "Three Girls"? A. The narrator is rattled by many unruly outbursts of the shoppers at the Strand, building suspense. B. The plot builds suspense with questions and uncertainties. Is it really Marilyn? Will she be caught? C. The setting is on a snowy evening in New York, which automatically makes the story suspenseful.​

User Neo
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Joyce Carol Oates' romantic short story “Three Girls” describes how societal rules are meant to be broken. By using foreshadowing and selection of detail, Oates is able to create suspense throughout the story.

Oates uses foreshadowing to give the readers a sense of suspense. The story is based around the narrator and “you,” who the reader discovers is a friend of the narrator. “I adored and feared you knowing that you’d break my heart, my heart that had never been broken because never before so exposed” (Oates 273). This quote foreshadows the underlying relationship that is implied between the narrator and her friend. Furthermore Oates shows foreshadowing when the narrator describes how both girls could spend the rest of their lives: “Which of us would marry, have babies, disappear into ‘real’ life, … could anyone have predicted, this snowy March evening in 1956?” (275). The narrator concludes that no one could have predicted the outcome. Through this the reader is able to assume that they did not have the average lifestyle that society expected. This heightens the reader's curiosity and the suspense.

Another way that Oates creates suspense is through selection of detail. In the introduction of the story, Oates describes the scene where the story takes place: “In Strand Used Books on Broadway and Twelfth … when the streetlights on Broadway glimmered with a strange sepia glow, we were two NYU girl-poets drifting through a warehouse of treasures as through an enchanted forest” (271). By depicting the warehouse as an enchanted forest full of treasures. In this depiction, the reader is able to assume that there is something magical that is about to happen in the small bookshop. Oates progresses the reader's curiosity when the narrator notices a strange woman: “In a man’s navy coat to her ankles and with sleeves past her wrists, a man’s beige fedora hat on her head … most of her hair hidden by the

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User Andrey Zhilyakov
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