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57 pages 1 hour read

After

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2011

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Literary Devices

First Person Narrator, Present Tense

As with his other titles in the Once series, Gleitzman allows his main character, Felix Salinger, to narrate the story in the first person, present tense. Using this biased perspective allows the author to express intimately what the protagonist is experiencing. Using the present tense also lets the narrator describe the actions taking place with a sense of immediacy, allowing readers to participate in the dramatic events as they are occurring. This voice and tense also enable readers to participate in the main character’s inner thoughts and emotions.

If there is a downside to writing in the present tense, it is that the passage of time—particularly lengthy spans of days—may cause the reader to feel that the author is omitting important events. Interruptions in a present tense monologue may be jarring to readers who find themselves transported from one “present moment” to another without connection. The other potential issue with writing in the first person is the recognition that the protagonist will survive at least until the end of the narrative. Thus, although Felix constantly faces mortal dangers, readers know he will survive them all, even though other characters around him might perish.

Humor

In Australia, Gleitzman is well-known for his children’s books, most of which are filled with humor. Given the serious and historically oriented content of the Once series, readers might not expect After to contain much humor, but even in the midst of the devastating tragedies that the novels describe, the author uses different forms of humor to accentuate the tone of the various settings. Often, his humor is childlike, designed to reflect the psychological realities of Felix’s still-innocent mind. For example, as Felix consoles himself about having to give up his dream of finding a new set of parents, he compares himself to Dom, noting that the horse has not seen his parents in ages but still does not complain. Gleitzman engages the characters in funny banter as well, as when the partisans talk about how the war has disrupted their lives and expectations; one of the fighters remarks that he called a taxi a year before and it still has not arrived. As is often the case with people living through times of protracted suffering, the characters also employ a darker version of humor commonly known as “gallows humor.” A prime example of this occurs when the partisans try to convince Felix to use items stolen from Nazis who had first stolen them from people in the death camps; the remark is made that the previous owners no long have need of them. Felix also engages in ironic humor, as when he taunts one of the Hitler Youth about having stolen his bazookas and boots. Gleitzman uses humor in all cases as a way of inserting human emotions and perspectives into an inhumane world.

Ironic Timing

Gleitzman uses the device of ironic timing throughout the novel, for Felix repeatedly shows up just after a violent episode that might have claimed his life or arrives just in the nick of time to avert disaster. For example, when he disobeys Gabriek’s orders and follows him into the forest, he returns to the farm later only to find that the barn is on fire; had Felix obeyed Gabriek Borowski, he would have perished in the flames. As it happens, he arrives just in time to save Dom from certain death. Later in the novel, he is just in time to steal the bicycle, boots, and bazookas that a Hitler Youth boy momentarily left unattended outside a home. This pattern continues throughout the novel as he is away from the partisan camp when it is attacked by the Nazis and yet arrives in a city just after an Allied bombing run and just in time to save the lives of six war orphans. Finally, at the end of the novel, Felix is just in time to reunite with his mother in the concentration camp before she succumbs to years of maltreatment and dies.

On those occasions when Felix is neither too early nor too late, he tends to witness atrocities. He watches Nazis execute a weary Jewish man who cannot continue marching toward a death camp; sees Yuli brought into the partisan camp, wounded in a gun battle; watches Nazis kill a Polish farmer while stealing his good; and observes Russians abuse and kill a German woman. Thus, time spares and rewards Felix personally, though it forces him to witness the suffering of others.

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