The Veldt Analysis

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At some point in their life, people have read a book or story and felt like they are a part of the plot. In “The Veldt,” Ray Bradbury uses craft moves to make the reader feel like they’re in the world that the kids have fantasized about. Using extreme detail about the African savanna, Bradbury shows, not tells readers about the Veldt. Using senses, sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch, Bradbury makes readers feel like they’re there in the Veldt. During the first scene when the parents go into the Veldt, Bradbury uses the five senses to make the reader feel like they’re there. Smell plays a big part of the scene in the African savanna. Bradbury writes, “...the great rusty smell of animals…” about the scent in the air. This gives the readers something to compare the smell to. He’s not just saying the animals smell bad, they smell like something readers would know about. This makes it possible for readers to put themselves there and smell it too. The “...papery rustling of vultures,” is a noise readers could understand too. Readers know what paper sounds like when it's moved, so knowing the birds sound like that gives them a sense of being there, in the heat, watching the vultures too. Using the five senses is very helpful to the audience by giving them more perspective on what the characters are experiencing. …show more content…
They can say that the extreme details and use of the senses are for making the kids look delusional by seeing this African savanna. Although that point could be argued due to the fact that the kids do kill their parents at the end of the story, it’s not nearly as important as making the reader feel a stronger connection to the story with these craft moves. All of the details immersed into Bradbury’s scenes were for the reader's sake; “being in the story,” and not just reading them, but seeing the