Tuff
Style and Technique
Paul Beatty's style in "Tuff" dazzles with bold energy and linguistic inventiveness: the author masterfully blends street slang with ironic cultural allusions, creating a lively, pulsating speech where every word echoes the city's bustle. The language is rich with witty turns, paradoxes, and unexpected metaphors, giving the narrative a special density and depth. Beatty skillfully uses satire and grotesque to expose the contradictions and absurdities of modern life, and his characters speak as if every dialogue is a ring match, with verbal blows that are sharp and relentless. The novel's structure is built on dynamic shifts of episodes, where the hero's inner monologue intertwines with external events, and the narrative alternately accelerates and slows, reflecting the rhythm and chaos of the big city. Beatty's literary techniques are a kaleidoscope of cultural quotes, ironic reminiscences, and abrupt tonal shifts, making "Tuff" sound like a bold and piercing symphony of modernity.
