When an author
leaves details unknown or does not specify a part in a story, it leaves the
reader guessing and using their imagination to figure out what is happening or
what a scene looks like. Ambiguity lets the audience pick and choose parts of
the book, creating the imagines in their heads as they read along. By giving
the audience the opportunity to create characters and how the book may play
out, it lets them enjoy the book and continues to keep them interested and
invested.
In The Book Thief, Markus Zusak gives the
audience to take a chance as use the power of imagination to create the image
of the town and what the characters look like. Zusak gives a sufficient amount
of detail and describes the characters enough to provide an image of them, but
lets the reader’s imagination create the rest. Zusak keeps the readers on their
feet the whole time, leaving questions unanswered, character relationships
hidden, and giving the reader leeway to create what the characters looked like
and their personality.
Leaving room for
the reader to imagine the text in the way they want is how ambiguity works with
literature. The author gets to write the book and imagine the book the way they
want to and lets the audience imagine it the same or differently. By letting
the reader imagine, is gives them a better appreciation of the book and how an
author is able to give the reader control of the text too.
I loved your point that when the reader has a chance to imagine it "gives them a better appreciation of the book." I've often experienced this when I find a book I love and I begin to imagine the plot line working out in a different way or what the characters would act like in different situations. Perhaps a reader can only truly appreciate a piece of writing once they stop simply reading the words and begin to "imagine the text in the way they want." This kind of imagining cannot take place in a completely straightforward text. At least a little ambiguity is always necessary for true imagination, and therefore true connection, to take place.
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