Cue For Treason: Chapter Analysis

Decent Essays
Throughout the novel Cue For Treason, Geoffrey Trease captures and maintains the audience's attention. He uses multiple strategies to do so. Following a formula for each chapter, using a variety of characters, and literary devices are just a few out of those strategies.

Each chapter of Cue For Treason follows a formula to create suspense. At the start of each chapter, Trease resolves the cliffhanger of the previous chapter. Next, he builds the action and suspense to lead us to the climax. Each chapter of Cue For Treason has its own climax. The climax is the highest point of action, adventure and suspense. Shortly after we have the climax, Trease completes the chapter with a cliffhanger. A cliffhanger to abruptly stop the story at a very

Related Documents

  • Superior Essays

    The historical fiction novel, Rise to Rebellion, is about the lead up to, the strategies of, and the politics behind the Revolutionary War told from numerous points of view throughout the novel. The book starts out with a man, who remains nameless, who is a part of the British military. The book describes a horrible ordeal that goes down in Boston, Massachusetts, which later you find out was the Boston Massacre. This event caused a great number of people on both opposing sides of the dispute to become frustrated. The British then began to place more and more taxes on the colonists.…

    • 1927 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the book “3:59” the author Gretchen McNeil, writes the story about a girl named Josie, whose life is miserable and would do anything so switch it with a doppelgänger who she thinks her life is perfect, and everything she wants but has an unexpected twist in her life. A quote from the book is, “But Jo’s world is far from perfect. Not only is Nick not Jo’s boyfriend, he hates her. Jo’s mom is missing, and is probably insane. And at night, shadowy creatures feed on human flesh.”…

    • 873 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller and Cornelius are considered to be the three businessmen who generated big business and tremendous wealth. With steel, oil and railroads being the drive force of the Gilded Age, was modern corporation the start to these massive corporations at this time? Janelle, you mentioned that Andrew Carnegie created the growth of the steel industry and he used certain methods to transform the industry. Did other successful business also follow Carnegie's methods or did they use other techniques to stay competitive? After reading the chapter, it is amazing to know that these three powerful businessmen created the foundation to the 2nd industrial revolution of how to run and do business.…

    • 133 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Chapter 7: (The Spoilsmen: An Age of Cynicism) The Spoilsmen were also known as Robber Barons or Captains of Industry. From 1865 through the Industrial Revolution, they controlled most of the wealth, and thought that since they or their parents worked hard to get it they deserved it. The Republican Party was corrupt at this time, and was more successful than the Democrats. All the Republican Presidents during this time period were corrupt in some way, and even the leaders of the Republican Party were corrupt, men like Roscoe Conkling and James G. Blaine.…

    • 1878 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Foreshadowing and suspense are two crucial elements that add to the tone, mood and theme of this spine tingling, edge of your seat play. Included in the performance is a cast of characters, a deadly setting,…

    • 281 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    During the time period of 1786 through the 1800s, a lot of historical plans went into effect, which has shaped our nation today. In Chapter 8: The New Nation, plans of forming a brand new government had started mainly because of Whiskey’s and Shay’s rebellion. Each rebellion shed light on the extreme amount on taxes to the people, and it showed that the people needed some type of stability from the government. Three important men in chapter eight are George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams. George Washington became the First President of the United States or America on April 30, 1739.…

    • 579 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Throughout Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, there are some chapters that readers may feel lack information or any plot movement that pertains to the book in a direct way and would like to just pass through those chapters as quickly as possible because those particular chapters are thought of as filler chapters. If there is one thing a reader should take away from studying any Jane Austen piece is that she has a talent to formulate and place events in an appropriate order so that everything that happens throughout the novel fits perfectly together like a puzzle and that she has a rhyme and reason for the information she expresses throughout the book. A particular chapter that should be focused on is Chapter 10 in Volume One. On the first read-through, this chapter seems unimportant based on how it is primarily about writing letters and killing time until Jane Bennet has recovered from the…

    • 1577 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Decent Essays

    RR3: Appreciation for the Past In chapters five and six, Kingsolver brings up the importance of family farmers, family history, tobacco, and turkey. Her husband, Steven Hopp, addresses how the CAFO mistreats animals. To start off, in chapter five, Kingsolver begins with a story about a man by the name Sanford Webb. He was the original owner of farm she and her family live on.…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This passage is found in paragraph twenty eight, Volume I, Chapter XI of Adolf Hitler`s Mein Kampf or simply My Battle. The Mein Kampf is an autobiographical manifesto which explains Hitler`s own political philosophy (fascism) and his ideas on politics and race for future German success. When the Mein Kampf was published in 1925, Adolf Hitler was a leader of the National Socialist Party, a war veteran, and a prisoner in a German prison. The book originally was written mostly for the followers of National Socialism.…

    • 485 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In chapter 9 of The Good Citizen, Russell Dalton (2009) compares the effects of the shift in citizenship norms in the United States and in the other advanced industrial democracies based on three political aspects: participation, tolerance and democratic values. Two couple of terms of duty based citizenship and engaged citizen are consistently used in this chapter to illustrate the changes in political cultures of not only the America but also other advanced democratic countries. Duty based citizenship poses images of the individuals who conservatively believe that heavy-duty activities such as voting, paying tax or obeying the law would be measurement of a healthy democracy (Dalton, 2009). Meanwhile, engaged citizenship is grouping people who get involved in politics in more assertive approaches which tend to pose more challenges to their…

    • 811 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The novel, Cue for Treason, by Geoffrey Trease, gives an opportunity to look at a world that might have not otherwise been known. Throughout the novel, a fourteen year-old boy named Peter Brownrigg is telling his story through his eyes. Peter becomes an admirable character that is easy to identify with. He is a common, but brave, boy who takes great risks and is loyal to his friends and his country. All through the story he is put in dangerous situations but is always determined to solve the problems that are placed on him.…

    • 1271 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Suspense is a state of mental uncertainty or excitement, as in awaiting a decision or outcome, usually accompanied by a degree of apprehension or anxiety. Most people crave suspense in literature, movies, or other forms of entertainment. Author Richard Connell uses suspense in the form of foreshadowing in the short story “The Most Dangerous Game” to pull readers in and create a certain interest and involvement in the characters and the story. In the beginning of the story Rainsford and his partner Whitney are on a boat heading in the direction of Rio.…

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the book, The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates by Wes Moore (2011), there are many topics that can be explored. One topic that continuously constructed is a young drug dealer. In chapter three, someone displays money and headset for the other Wes if he works in the drugs, and the other Wes starts to sell the drugs. Furthermore, the other Wes and his friend “ Woody” use the drugs with older kids. In chapter four, the other Wes sells the drugs, but he lies for his mother and brother.…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Paper #1: Chapters 1-3 of Voices of Freedom Looking back at the whole occurrence of the discovery of the New World it becomes evident the many hardships that the colonial settlers caused which justifies the egocentric intentions of the many Europeans. It seems that even though the settlers were fleeing from a country that forced views among themselves or caused unjust situations; the colonists were precisely acting on the foreign population, who they viewed as “lesser”, similarly to that of their homelands. Although at the time the occurrence was not obvious, looking at it from today’s standpoint, it is quit ironic. On more than one instance the settlers treated distinctive groups with an inhumane disrespect with no regard to their well-being.…

    • 1052 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    South Africa has a complex political history. It is filled with intricacies and subtleties which are difficult to understand from an outside perspective. The power and volatility of South Africa’s political climate was enough to drive hordes of South African’s to find refuge in other countries while still longing for their homeland. This review is about Rian Malan’s 1991 book “My Traitor’s Heart, Blood and Bad Dreams: A South African Explores the Madness in His Country, His Tribe and Himself” published by Vintage Press in London.…

    • 1621 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays