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  1. The characters whose point of view we see most frequently are Ralph, Jack, Simon, and Piggy. The narrator devotes the most time to Ralph, describing not just his thoughts but his thought process—“Then, at the moment of greatest passion and conviction, that curtain flapped in his head and he forgot—what he had been driving at.”.

  2. Third Person (Omniscient) The narrator in Lord of the Flies moves back and forth omnisciently between different scenes and thoughts. Take Chapter Eight, for example, where in the space of a few pages we get Jack hunting, "happy and [wearing] the damp darkness of the forest like his old clothes" (8.181); and Simon watching the flies swarm "black and iridescent green" on the pig's head; and then ...

  3. Narrator The story is told by an anonymous third-person narrator who conveys the events of the novel without commenting on the action or intruding into the story. Point of View The narrator speaks in the third person, primarily focusing on Ralph’s point of view but following Jack and Simon in certain episodes. The narrator is omniscient and ...

  4. The tone of Lord of the Flies shifts dramatically as the novel progresses, reflecting the characters' movement from innocence to corruption. Innocence and Hope: At the start of the novel, the tone is hopeful, as the boys attempt to create a civilised society. The conch and assemblies represent this hope for order. However, this tone gradually ...

  5. Lord of the Flies by William Golding has a third person narrator. The narrator is omniscient,with access to the characters’ thoughts and feelings: “Ralph was annoyed and, for the moment, defeated. He felt himself facing something ungraspable.” (pp. 35-36). However, the narrator only occasionally gives insight into the characters ...

  6. Exam Questions. 6 hours 113 questions. Download. All answers. 1 34 marks. How far does Golding present Piggy as a character with useful and important ideas in Lord of the Flies? Write about: • What Piggy says and does that can be seen as useful and important. • How far Golding presents Piggy as a character with useful and important ideas.

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  8. Key Facts about Lord of the Flies. Full Title: Lord of the Flies. Where Written: England. When Published: 1954. Literary Period: Post-war fiction. Genre: Allegorical novel / Adventure novel. Setting: A deserted tropical island in the middle of a nuclear world war. Climax: Piggy's death.

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