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The maps

Posted: 18 Feb 2022, 13:37
by Sola Gracia
Can we discuss the maps on the first pages of the book? What is their significance to be there? What is their relation with the book's overall theme?

Re: The maps

Posted: 19 Feb 2022, 03:20
by Janelydia Mwangi
A map can give direction or location in this case the scenes change as the events progress. At one point Myra talks to Sarah about her vision of the bear we then meet Sarah practising what she had learnt about the culture.she relieves the spirit of the Elk.The map therefore inform of the changes in themes and places the past boundaries that have changed with time. The themes also being the history go hand in hand to understand the layout of places before the development of the society.

Re: The maps

Posted: 20 Feb 2022, 18:04
by E-R-H
The significance of the maps on the first pages of the book is so that we, as the audience, are clear about the setting of the story. Personally, I tend to make up worlds/environments when I'm unsure about a book's setting. I'm inclined to believe that most readers fall under that category, since reading can provide a brief escape from reality and what better way to escape reality than through the imagination. But as far as the maps' relation to the overall theme of Strong Heart, the concept of connection is a huge deal in the story. Connection from a historical standpoint and connection from a relational standpoint. Maps exist as physical representations of where we stand in the world around us and of the geographical gaps that stand between us and someone else. I guess you could say that a map facilitates connection in many forms, and therefore, the maps at the beginning of the book relate directly to its overall theme.

Re: The maps

Posted: 21 Feb 2022, 07:55
by Regard003
I feel the significance of the map in the first page of Totem is to give a geographical summary of the book. It explains to the reader the places we would expect the characters to go and the approximate distance. It showed historical and relational geographic points.

Re: The maps

Posted: 21 Feb 2022, 14:15
by Themmie10
The significance of a map is to prevent a person from getting lost.
So the importance of the map in the book is for the reader to get a geographical direction of the places in the book, though it will take an intelligent person to read a map but it’s still quite helpful.

Re: The maps

Posted: 21 Feb 2022, 15:09
by Gabriela Contreras
I believe maps are there to help us get a geographical setting, as an aid to locating yourself in some places and a get mental image. I like having maps on my books.

Re: The maps

Posted: 21 Feb 2022, 20:07
by Muna Chizzy
The significant of the map is so that readers will have a clear understanding of the places and location mentioned in the book. Although am not good in maps, the author did a good job in adding a map at the beginning of the story to help readers understand the geographical setting of the book.

Re: The maps

Posted: 21 Feb 2022, 23:21
by Guda Lydia
The maps are a visual aid and part of the story. They guide on the exact location the story and characters head to and also act as a reference for the readers. For the visual readers and those who love to read/interpret maps, it gives a break from the story and creates an actual mental picture of how or where the story unfolds. Granted, some may view the maps as challenging to interpret or a distraction, but overall, to me they also atell the journey.

Re: The maps

Posted: 22 Feb 2022, 04:12
by Harsh Soni 3
I think that the author includes maps to clear all geographically situations. Maps help the reader to better visualize the situation and condition that can significantly increase the reading experience. Or the author includes maps just to make the book seem more authentic.

Re: The maps

Posted: 22 Feb 2022, 05:11
by Francis Aderogbin
The map gives clarity to the setting of the story. I didn't have to make up the location in my head while reading. It helps to guide when there is a switch in location. Since location relates to the book's theme, it also helps interpret the theme correctly.

Re: The maps

Posted: 22 Feb 2022, 09:30
by Raymonda onwuka
I usually love stories with maps, this is because maps are visual aids. They help the reader to properly visualize what they are reading, thereby making the whole reading process more enjoyable.

Re: The maps

Posted: 22 Feb 2022, 10:48
by Sarah Sonbol
I liked the idea of drawing the maps at the beginning as they allow you to know the geographical locations mentioned in the book, so it makes the book more enjoyable when you can visualise the different places mentioned there.

Re: The maps

Posted: 22 Feb 2022, 11:48
by Macharia Kariuki
geographical locations are well illustrated and explained using maps. Maps aid greatly also to a reader as it makes a book more interesting in breaking the monotony of continued reading.

Re: The maps

Posted: 23 Feb 2022, 14:53
by Timothy Rucinski
I am typically overjoyed when a novel includes a map. This book was no exception. For me, as someone unfamiliar with the northwestern U.S. and southwestern Canada, the map provided a sense of place, a sense of being planted in a real location by which I could follow along with the activities of the adventurers. The maps made them seem like real people, not fictional characters in a novel. But the map showing the overall relation of North America to Asia across a brief expanse of water certainly helps to hold up the speculation that the continent was perhaps populated from the west. I found myself going back and forth between the text and the maps to root myself in the characters' footsteps as their way to Bear Valley and its environs.

Re: The maps

Posted: 24 Feb 2022, 04:17
by Obinna Chima Agoms
The maps were absolutely necessary. There were so many places mentioned in the adventure. I had to personally go back to the maps to make sense of some places in the book. I could also make a connection between places, alongside making distictions.