Lamb
to the
Slaughter
100

What did Mary use to kill her husband?

a lamb leg

100

Who did Mary kill?

her husband

100

Who is Mary?

the wife

200

What was Mary cooking?

lamb

200

Who ate the lamb?

the detectives

200

Who wrote Lam to the Slaughter?

Roald Dahl

300

True or False:

Mary was not pregnant.

FALSE

300

True or False: 

Mary has a cat.

FALSE
300

How did Mary kill Patrick?

with a lamb leg to the head

400
Where did Mary go to try to cover her tracks (conceal her actions)?

the grocery store

400

Why did Mary giggle in the living room?

because the detectives were eating the evidence

*This is dramatic irony: a storytelling device where the audience knows critical information that the characters do not / creates suspense and tension

- The climax/height of the irony occurs when Mary convinces the hungry detectives to eat her cooked lamb roast. The reader watches in suspense (and dark amusement) as the investigators literally consume the evidence while discussing the case.

400

What does Mary insist then detectives do with lamb she cooked?

eat it

500

What did the detectives think Mary killed her husband with?

Nothing. The suspected nothing heinous from Mary.

(the detectives did not believe Mary was capable of doing anything shockingly wicked, monstrous, or evil. They trusted her so much that they never considered she might be planning or participating in something deeply malicious)


500

What did Mary's husband tell her?

he is leaving her
500

Which type of irony describes this situation in the book: 

When Mary asks the officers to eat the lamb, she claims it would be a "favor" to her. She says this to trick them, but her actual intention (getting rid of the murder weapon) is completely concealed behind a polite, hospitable veneer/disguise.

  1. Dramatic Irony
  2. Situational Irony
  3. Verbal Irony

Verbal Irony