The moment in a Hero's Journey where they face a significant challenge
What is "ordeal."
Dr Seuss is famous for this type of rhyme where two words share the same ending sound
What is rhyme
The Waiting Place represents this through its imagery of darkness
What is stagnation or indecision
This mode of transportation represents freedom
What is the balloon
The book teaches readers to prepare for "lonely games" or this type of era.
What is your hardship era.
In Oh the Places You'll Go the Waiting place is this part of the Heroic Journey (where the Hero gets stuck).
What is the refusal of the call or roadblock
"You will move mountains" is this type of literary device
What is hyperbole or metaphor
Soring to heights represents
A good part of the journey - light
What is personal growth
Dr Seuss encourages people to keep moving forward to get to this era.
What is your perseverance era.
The hero realizes he has strength to move forward or
Resiliance
The use of contrasting tones when you are uplifted mixed with darker tones like "The Waiting place" showcases this literary mashup
What is juxtaposition?
"Sometimes you won't" suggests
Struggle
Free Choice
What is your celebration era
Bang ups and Hang ups are these journey parts
What is the trial or test
Bang Ups and Hang Ups uses this type of literary device
What is rhyme?
The theme of this book
Hope overcomes Adversity
The phrase "on your way up" suggests this attribute
What is success?
The era you are in when you "are on your own and you know what you know"
What is your Self Reliance Era
Dr Seuss hopes that all trials will lead to this
What is a great life
Dr. Seuss uses the rhyme scheme called
Anapestic Tetrameter
Going back and forth from resilience to stagnation shows this truth about life
What is resilience gets you through it
The symbolism of paths, roads, and directions represents this philosophical concept
What is life's destiny or journey
The era you are in when you finish reading this book
What is your graduation era