Night

by Elie Wiesel

Night: Tone 1 key example

Definition of Tone

The tone of a piece of writing is its general character or attitude, which might be cheerful or depressive, sarcastic or sincere, comical or mournful, praising or critical, and so on. For instance... read full definition
The tone of a piece of writing is its general character or attitude, which might be cheerful or depressive, sarcastic or sincere, comical or mournful, praising or critical... read full definition
The tone of a piece of writing is its general character or attitude, which might be cheerful or depressive, sarcastic or sincere, comical... read full definition
Chapter 7
Explanation and Analysis:

The tone of Night by Elie Wiesel is dejected, truthful, and conflicted. The tone throughout the memoir is not one of hope. As the story continues, the plot exudes less and less emotion, as Eliezer himself becomes colder and more removed. Eliezer does not endure his Holocaust experience with faith that he is going to get out alive, hope that his father is going to live, or trust that anyone will save him. He contemplates death many times. He even explicitly denies having a reason to live any longer:

Suddenly, the evidence overwhelmed me: there was no longer any reason to live, any reason to fight.