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Comparing the plot, characters, and styles of The Chrysalids and “The Great Game at the End of the World” CA$11.53   Add to cart

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Comparing the plot, characters, and styles of The Chrysalids and “The Great Game at the End of the World”

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Essay comparing the plot, characters, and styles of The Chrysalids and “The Great Game at the End of the World”

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  • May 6, 2024
  • 9
  • 2021/2022
  • Book review
  • Unknown
  • Secondary school
  • 12th Grade
  • English
  • 1
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Comparing the plot, characters, and styles of The Chrysalids and “The Great Game at the End of

the World”

The world is destroyed and the protagonist is living through it, this is the focus of “The

Great Game at the End of the World” (“T.G.G.E.W.”). Similarly, in The Chrysalids the

protagonist is living in a society bouncing back from the end of the world.Both are dystopian

stories that centre around a young man and the journey he goes through. The Chrysalids is a

novel about a post-apocalyptic society in which all physical and mental abnormalities are

frowned upon and purged. It is about the life of David Strorm and the challenges that he faces

with having a cognitive deviation. “T.G.G.E.W.” is a short story about a brother and sister’s

experiences before and after the apocalypse, the story centers around a game of baseball played

with aliens and monsters. Although at the surface it seems as though The Chrysalids and

“T.G.G.E.W.” are two incredibly different stories, their plots and their characters contain many

similar aspects. Most of their differences lie in the style of the writing as the time frame and

tenses of the stories are varied. However, even the styles contain some similar components such

as the mood of dread.

While the plots of the two stories are vastly different, there are specific ideas in them that

are extremely similar. The idea of a higher power regretting or growing to dislike his creation

and attempting to destroy it or punishing it is a commonality between the stories. In The

Chrysalids it is referred to as Tribulation, whereas in “T.G.G.E.W.” it is called the end of the

world. While talking about past punishments sent from God, David reveals that “Tribulation had

been another such punishment, but the greatest of all: it must, when it struck, have been like a

combination of all these disasters.” (Wyndham 15). This shows that in The Chrysalids, God was

, upset with what his creation, mankind, had done. God believed that their society had done

something that was worse than every one of man’s past sins, so he punished them with a

Tribulation equal to all past sins combined. This is very similar to the end of the world in

“T.G.G.E.W.”. When Russel is asking one of the creepies what he is, the creepy says “‘He didn’t

like it anymore, so he destroyed it. Like he did to mine. Like he did to all of ours.’ ‘He?’ ‘You

know.’ With a bony finger, he pointed up. ‘Him.’” (Kressel 14). This demonstrates that in this

world ‘He’ was no longer happy with the society he created so he decided to destroy it. ‘He’ is

implied to be an all-powerful, God-like figure that has destroyed many worlds in the past

because he no longer liked how they were running. The ideas of divine intervention are present

in both of these stories and the ways in which they manifest themselves are very similar, giving

both stories a mystical feeling.

Punishment from God, or a similar deity, is present in The Chrysalids and “T.G.G.E.W.”

and the ways in which it manifests itself is extremely similar. In both stories, God had sent down

many punishments to his creations in the past. This is important because it implies in both worlds

God made extremely flawed creatures. In The Chrysalids, God created humanity and punished

them repeatedly because he had let his creations go down paths that strayed too far from what he

intended. In “T.G.G.E.W.” ‘He’ is said to have created many worlds where his creations always

had one thing in common, they all eventually made mistakes that caused their creator to dislike

and destroy them. Another way in which the punishments from God are similar in the two tales is

that the punishments, intended or not, bring unfamiliar and strange creatures into the society of

the main characters. In “T.G.G.E.W.” the end of the world brings the creepies and the Kens and

Barbies into Russel’s town. The creepies are strange as they are from another planet and the

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