Is Lord Of The Flies A Terrifying Novel?

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Is Lord Of The Flies A Terrifying Novel?

Lord of the flies has been called many things since it was released: a child’s tale of adventure, an ex navy officer’s insight into human nature, but can it be called terrifying?

Golding’s message is indeed frightening; it tells us that without society’s harsh conditioning we will succumb to savagery and become savages like Roger and Jack. This challenges the idea that some people are born good and it makes us realize that without the constant threat of prison and other forms of conditioning, we would be no better than the so called scum of death row and this idea should terrify the readers down to their very bones.

The theme of death in Lord of the flies in Lord of the flies is wasn’t written as violent and graphic as it could have been but instead Golding portrayed death in much more childish way that makes it all the more terrifying. For example during the death of Simon the inhabitants of the Island Chanted: “kill the beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood! “. This made the tragic murder of Simon seem to be a game and not an atrocity, this attitude towards murder should terrify the reader because if they view murder as a game what would the view mass murder or genocide as?

My point is further emphasised by roger murdering piggy with a sense of “delirious abandonment”. Delirious implying that at this moment all Roger is feeling is a sense of euphoria in the barbaric act of murder him showing this immense joy should terrify the reader because a remorseful murderer you can feel pity for but someone who revels in the act of murder would terrify you.

Roger us established as representing the innate evil inside humanity but could he represent fear as well? Well on one side it could be arg...

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... In the end, Piggy faces "sniggering," "jeering" and "booing" from the others before Roger unleashes the boulder that knocks Piggy off the cliff and onto the rocks below. This demonstrates that the further the intensity of bullying increases the more society decline and this should terrify the reader because of the shear amount of bullying we have in modern day society.

To conclude I agree that Lord of the flies is a terrifying novel and Golding does this be creating a chilling message, characters such as Roger and the Beast who cause terror in both the story and in their hiding meanings, in the bullying and eventual demise of two boys who wanted nothing but to help them survive summing up to a book which directly is very terrifying but when looked at deeper is full of implications and hidden meaning which should terrify the reader.

Works Cited

lord of the flies

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