Nelson’s writing includes many familial components, which give her writing a sense of her personal impersonations, and how she astutely incorporates it into her stories. As she beautifully encompasses her character’s superstition into the outcome of the novel, and how their beliefs intertwine with the plotline. For instance, in I’ll Give You The Sun, Jude’s late grandmother leaves behind a bible of her greatest superstitions, which Jude uses as cope mechanisms to a tragic loss in her life and her emotional connection to Gram Sweetwine. Such as, from the book itself, if a boy gives a …show more content…
The impactful ramifications of her work in artistry has captured the eyes of many. As she advises us to “live and breathe words”, (Nelson, the Guardian; Jandy Nelson News Article) her subtle inclusion of her personal connections, her intertwinement of the arts and the significant morals that she has spread across the public has flourished. Nelson is a great exemplar of how there are certain books of today that have been created with talent and success, and that have indeed been able to capture the public eye-and are able to positively develop our minds from something that is truly