28 Results for Narrative

Helen Garner, in her short story collection, My Hard Heart, uses a wide variety of different narrative perspectives. Each type of narration is closely linked with, and special to, the story or experience being told. Susan Hosking, describes Garners writing style as an 'ability to refine subject matt...
poe
Horror and suspense-filled movies, books, and stories are America's favorite form of entertainment. One of the most famous American writers is Edgar Allen Poe who wrote the two famous stories "The Tell- Tale Heart" and "The Black Cat". In the "The Tell- Tale Heart" and " The Black Cat" narrative and...
Considered perhaps the greatest American playwright, Tennessee Williams was raised in Mississippi and achieved success early on in his career when he won the New York Critics' Circle Award in 1944-45 for the Broadway debut of The Glass Menagerie. Williams went on to win the same award and ...
\"Spotted Horses\" and \"Mule in the Yard\" are two short stories by William Faulkner that deal with comedic animal chases. Although both provide entertaining examples of Faulkner\'s work in very similar settings, on the scale of literary value, \"Spotted Horses\" rises above \"Mule in the Yard\" i...
A Deeper Darkness Edgar Allan Poe is considered to be one of the most influential short story authors of mystery, suspense, and the supernatural. His usage of literary techniques compels his reader to finish his tales at one sitting. It is believed that Poe's usage of first-person narrative i...
Edgar Allan Poe is famous for his short stories and specifically the manner in which he was able to draw in the audience and totally hold their focus. Interestingly, it seems that all of his stories have a specific location that is defined by a specific space and time. This locale helps to init...
At first glance, Herman Melville's "Bartelby, the Scrivener" seems like a simple story telling of how hopelessness and despair can destroy a man. There are many more elements that make this story a classic, however. One of the main aspects Melville uses is the first-person narrative...
When comparing works of the same author, especially in the same media, you can learn much about that author's style, characterization, bias and even background. Alistair MacLeod presents many similarities in his short stories, including a love for Eastern Canada, which can be based on his backg...
"Nathaniel Hawthorne's work is typically fraught with symbolism, much of it deriving from his Puritan ancestry; a great-great uncle was actually a judge in the Salem witchcraft trials" (Roth 76). Not surprisingly, Hawthorne was obsessed with the twin themes of sin and guilt. Author John Roth not...
In reading "The Shadow", by Hans Christian Anderson, and " The Nose" by Nikolai Vasilyevich Gogol, they both surprise the reader by having an unrealistic initiating incident. Both stories give the reader full of excitement, and unexpected ending. "On the Aim and Technique of...
J. D. Salinger J. D. Salinger "The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it." -James Bryce* In 1945, a novel was published that would forever change the way society views itself. The book, entitled The Catcher in the Rye, would propel a man named Jerome David Saling...
One of the finest sytlist of modern English literature was Joseph Conrad, was a Polish-bornEnglish novelist, short story writer, essayist, dramatist, and autobiographer. Conrad wasborn in 1857 in a Russian-ruled Province of Poland. According to Jocelyn Baines, a literarycritic, "Conrad was exiled ...
The works of James Phelan (Reading Secrets) and Michael Levenson (Secret History in 'The Secret Sharer') both take a look at Joseph Conrad's short story, "The Secret Sharer", from two different critical perspectives. Phelan discusses "The Secret Sharer" from the ...
Poe and Hawthorne vs. the Irony of Gothicism Many writers use literary devices in order to portray a central theme in their stories. These devices enable the stories to have a more in depth meaning, rather than what is blatantly being said. In this case, there is a constant use of irony, which ...
Architecture is defined as the art and science of designing and erecting buildings (American Heritage Dictionary, 4th Ed, and Copyright 2000). If one were so inclined, he or she could see literary authors as architects of the places in which their characters live, love, and die. Much as an architect...
The title of Carlos Fuentes' The Crystal Frontier may seem on its surface quite difficult to understandâ€"how can a frontier, even the great American frontier, be crystal, even crystal-clear' The title refers to a crystal and beautiful office building cleaned by Mexican work...
William Faulkner's "Spotted Horses"and"Mule in the Yard"Lei SzabadosMarch 16, 1999UCONN English 109Mrs. Drescher"Spotted Horses" and "Mule in the Yard" are two short stories by William Faulkner that deal with comedic animal chases. Although both provide entertaining examples of Faulkner's work in v...
A & P John Updike is a writer famous for his short stories, essays, poetry, reviews, articles, art criticism and plays. He was born on March 18, 1932 in Reading PA. After graduating from High School, Updike was accepted to Harvard University where he wrote for the Harvard Lampoon. But the thing ...
Outline I. Introduction A. Hook: The story "Soldier's Home" by Ernest Hemingway was first published in 1925, seven years after WWI. B. Topic : Story describes the homecoming of a young American soldier who fought for his country in WWI 1. Enlisted in the marines in 1917 2. ...
"Nathaniel Hawthorne's work is typically fraught with symbolism, much of it deriving from his Puritan ancestry; a great-great uncle was actually a judge in the Salem witchcraft trials" (Roth 76). Not surprisingly, Hawthorne was obsessed with the twin themes of sin and guilt. Author John Roth notes t...
1. What is the literal purpose of Phoenix Jackson's trip? The literal purpose of Phoenix Jackson's trip is to travel from the country of Natchez to the city to obtain medicine for her sick grandson. 2. Where does she start and where does she end? Are there differences in the place from which s...
An author in several ways can reveal themes. Every reader interprets and recognizes different themes that are wicker in the story. The author places an emphasis on elements such as setting, point of view, or symbols that have a huge influence on how effective a story is. In the short story, The L...
A Rose for Emily, among several of William Faulkner's short stories, is always the favorite of anthologists. This strange story of love, obsession, and death enjoys special favor and regard among both readers and critics. William Faulkner is widely considered to be one of the greatest American ...
It all started on July 30th, 1909 when Juan Bosch was born to a Catalan father and a Puerto Rican mother. Juan Bosch was born in La Vega, Dominican Republic where most of the income came from farming. Due to Bosch's surrounding he grew up close to peasants and landowners, even though his father ow...
Chekhov's Use of Grief What is the fascination with grief and suffering that caused Anton Chekhov to entwine these two sad emotional states into everything he wrote? "Reading Anton Chekhov's stories, one feels oneself in a melancholy state. Everything is strange, sharp, lonely, motionless, helpless...