Kate Chopin's Caline

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Along with the a writer’s tone, includes their use of sensory detail. Within the three stories, the reader is pulled into the story by key words that include sight, taste, smell, touch, and finally sound. In Caline, Kate Chopin immediately starts her story with a powerful grasp of the reader’s attention through the way that Caline wakes up. As Caline emerges from her sleep, “she yawned and stretched her long brown legs and arms lazily” (Choplin 575) Choplin’s word choice was not very bold, but yet when the reader is reading this line, they are able to paint the picture that Caline is a tall woman with brown skin. If the Sentence were to have that simple word left out, it could change the reader’s view completely. Choplin also uses word like …show more content…

Vonnegut also wrote of what it sounded like from the television screen at Harrison’s parents home, “Screams and barking cries of concentration came from the television and again as though dancing to the tune of an earthquake” This sentence is so powerful, the reader is able to picture exactly how this event sounded as it blared through the television. Giving the reader an exact insight on how an event occurred within the story, not only strengthens the writer, but it also strengthens the reader’s comprehension. In The Scarlet Ibis the Narrator bonds with his brother Doodle from a simple lie of a story that he once told Doodle. Although the story Doodle loves is unimportant to the theme of the story, Author James Hurst still goes in depth about it. He describes the boy in the story as “ … a boy name Peter who wore a golden robe that glittered so brightly that when he walked through the sunflowers they turned away from the sun to face him” ( Hurst 421) Peter’s cloak is luminous in the reader’s mind, and it stands out because the “ sunflowers turn away from the sun to face him” showing that it is more radiant that the sun

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