Two Stories Essays

  • Two Stories

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    Two stories of disillusionment mirror one another in the tale of The Great Gatsby and the short story “The Far and the Near.” Here are two authors, within a ten year time span, that both wrote about life being completely shattered with a closer inspection of their surroundings. Both Fitzgerald and Wolfe wrote about the time of American history that was more consumed with image and excess than with love and respect for people and their surroundings. Each author gives an insightful warning that is

  • Alice Walker's Roselily - Two Stories in One

    582 Words  | 2 Pages

    Alice Walker's Roselily - Two Stories in One In the short story "Roselily", Alice Walker tells two stories in one. The most obvious story is the one about the Black American woman Roselily, who stands before the alter, just about to marry a muslim, while she thinks about her past, wonders about the future and is questioning wheter she is making the right choice. The other, hidden story is the story about Black American women in general, their history and their ongoing search for something better

  • Two Short Story Analysis

    1705 Words  | 4 Pages

    Kelly Link’s two short stories, “The Summer People” and “Origin Story”, the plots revolve around two girls who are both young, that share one common characteristic: deceitfulness. In the end of each novel, both protagonists are revealed to be lying to other characters; however, though both lie, the two lies are completely different from one another. In the first story “The Summer People”, the lie told by the protagonist Fran is harmful and cruel, but in the second short story “Origin Story”, the lie

  • Compare And Contrast: Two Short Stories

    1712 Words  | 4 Pages

    Compare and Contrast Essay: Two Short Stories Short stories are a form of literature works that authors use to communicate various themes and issues to the reader. As such, it is common for different short stories authored by different people to have a central meaning or theme that differs from each other. In addition, the way the author portrays his/her central theme or meaning would differ from the way other authors would craft their short stories to best portray their central meaning. While some

  • Compare And Contrast Two Short Story

    1293 Words  | 3 Pages

    studying short stories brought forward are both many similarities and many differences, which you may not see by just, reading one. Within three short stories, “Up in Michigan” by Ernest Hemingway, “Happy Endings” by Margaret Atwood, and “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe there are many similarities along with many differences. From similarities such as genre, climax, and style to differences such as point of view, theme, and plot these three stories portray short stories in an excellent

  • Similarities and Differences in Two Short Stories

    1314 Words  | 3 Pages

    women who lived before her time, whose stories might be seen as a vindication of the rights of women, and an author whose literary works were controversial and unappreciated until many years later” (TheStorm&FeministPhilosophy.com). This description of Chopin’s work is distinctly evident in one of most distinguished short stories “The Storm”. Sarah Orne Jewett was born on September 3, 1849. Jewett began her writing career dedicated to writing poems and short stories for children; eventually she turned

  • Point of View in Amy Tan’s Short Story, Two Kinds

    1088 Words  | 3 Pages

    Point of View in Amy Tan’s Short Story, Two Kinds In her short story "Two Kinds," Amy Tan utilizes the daughter's point of view to share a mother's attempts to control her daughter's hopes and dreams, providing a further understanding of how their relationship sours. The daughter has grown into a young woman and is telling the story of her coming of age in a family that had emigrated from China. In particular, she tells that her mother's attempted parental guidance was dominated by foolish hopes

  • An analysis on whether two characters from a story deserved their fate

    619 Words  | 2 Pages

    realize it is ok to forgive and forget. In The Interlopers, the two men at least tried to make amends. Even if it wasn’t legitimate, it still shows a lot that they tried as they had been enemies for so long. In the short story of The Interlopers, the two men did not deserve the fate that happened to them as they made an effort to become friends, everyone should get a second chance, and no one deserves to die that way. To start, the two men from The Interlopers did not deserve their fate as they made

  • Two Short Stories: The Gift of Magi and A Telephone Call

    990 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the short stories “The Gift f Magi” by O. Henry and “A telephone Call” by Dorothy Parker, two women are troubled by how their significant others view them. While O. Henry’s Della is able to see that Jim is not touched, Parker’s narrator is left with uncertainty because her significant other does not call back, stuffing her with skepticism. In O. Henry’s “The Gift of Magi”, a young couple in love has to get surprise gifts for each other before Christmas. The story takes place in a small-industrialized

  • Essay On Moby Dick: Defining Violence In Literature

    1030 Words  | 3 Pages

    Moby Dick: Defining Violence in Literature Two stories were recently told to me, independently of one another, and although I was struck by each, it was a third story that emerged from the collision of the first two that most challenged me. The first story is about the violence of literature: "That's my current definition of literature: a cataclysmic event, one that disrupts what we think we so-settle-edly-know..." (Dalke). The second story is a definition of violence that I heard used in the

  • Comparing Romantic Opposition in Billy Budd, Bartleby the Scrivener and Artist of the Beautiful

    1220 Words  | 3 Pages

    of fiction is a story entitled, simply, Billy Budd.  In this short story, Melville tells the tale of Billy Budd, a somewhat out-of-place stuttering sailor who is too innocent for his own good.  This enchanting tale, while inevitably entertaining, holds beneath it many layers of interpretive depth and among these layers of interpretation, an idea that has been entertained in the literature of many other romantic writers.  Melville uses a literary technique of developing two characters that are

  • The Struggle for Freedom in Yellow Wallpaper and Story of an Hour

    1104 Words  | 3 Pages

    Wallpaper and The Story of an Hour "The Yellow Wallpaper" and "The Story of an Hour" are two very similar stories. Both deal with middle-aged women who long to attain their freedom. They share the same theme, but convey the message differently in terms of style and quality. The two stories are about women who are fighting for freedom, happiness, and the ability to be truly expressive in any way possible. The greatest similarity is between the female protagonists of each story. Each woman is

  • Comparing The Great Santini and Death of a Salesman

    1249 Words  | 3 Pages

    to compare and contrast two things, the best way to go about doing that is with a Venn diagram. Truthfully, this is an effective method, but it is quite rudimentary under the circumstances. "The Great Santini" by Pat Conroy and "Death of a Salesman" by Arthur Miller are two books that can become victims of the dreaded Venn diagram. The two stories are accounts of the lives of two families, each living out its version of the American Dream. The focus of both stories is on the father and how

  • Comparing Women´s Images in The Yellow Wallpaper and The Awakening

    3073 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Yellow Wallpaper and The Awakening The aim of this essay is analyse women´s images in The Yellow Wallpaper and in The Awakening, since the two readings have become the focus of feminist controversy. Both stories were written by women, Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Kate Chopin. But is this fact important to understand the aim of every story? Would they have had the same effect if the had been written by men? I will explore these matters. I also considered it could be rather interesting

  • Comparison of Two Short Stories: the Red Room and Farthing House

    1462 Words  | 3 Pages

    Comparison of Two Short Stories: the Red Room and Farthing House I have been asked to compare two short stories for my English coursework. These two stories are called "The Red room" and "Farthing House". These stories are considerably different, partly because of the respective eras during which they were written. "Farthing House" was written by a female author, Susan Hill in 1992, while "The Red Room" was written by the famous H G Wells in the late 19th Century. There is almost a century

  • Comparing The Withered Arm and An Imaginative Woman

    1856 Words  | 4 Pages

    Comparing The Withered Arm and An Imaginative Woman I will be examining two novelettes by a single author, Thomas Hardy. "The Withered Arm" and "An Imaginative Woman". I will be highlighting the similarities and differences between them. Additionally I will be analyzing the content of each. The first thing we notice about the two stories is that they are both written in third person narrative. Another thing we notice about the style of writing in both is that it is very old fashioned

  • Essay Comparing Tale Of Two Sons And The Story Of Sayaka Miki

    523 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Tale of Two Sons and the Story of Sayaka Miki are both very distinctly differing accounts, yet both have a similar outcome. The two accounts share an identical moral: be careful what you wish for. Brothers: Tale of Two Sons -a game made by Starbreeze Studios- is about two brothers, Naia and Naiee, who journey far into their setting encountering trolls, giants, and even an owl griffin to scour for the tree of life to cure their lethally ill father. The brothers mother had drowned after falling

  • Comparing Gothic Romanticism in The Fall of the House of Usher and Ligeia

    1609 Words  | 4 Pages

    Edgar Allen Poe’s short stories is obvious to the average reader. The grotesque, the desolate, the horrible, the mysterious, the ghostly, and, ultimately, the intense fear are all the primary aspects of the stories which are emphasized. But few writers remain uninfluenced from their contemporaries and Poe is no exception. He is clearly a product of his time, which in terms of literature, is called the Romantic era. Poe combines these two threads in almost all of his stories. For this reason critics

  • Movie Essay - A Comparison of Satire in Voltaire's Candide and the Film Lexx

    1098 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lexx Voltaire's Candide is a story about a young man learning about the realities of the world; realities he never could have believed to happen in life because his education heavily involves the idea that this is the "best of all worlds." Salter Street Films' Lexx is a story about a group of misfit adventurers and the calamity that befalls them after they steal the Lexx, a Manhattan-sized insect with the ability to destroy planets. Though the two stories have more in common than one might

  • Chaucer's Canterbury Tales - Comparing The Pardoners Tale and The Nun's Priest's Tale

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    contradictions. 1  Two stories that serve as excellent demonstrations of irony are "The Pardoners Tale" and " The Nun's Priest's Tale," both from Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales. Although these two stories are very different, they both use irony to teach a lesson. Of the stories, "The Pardoners Tale" displays the most irony. First and foremost, the entire telling of the story is ironic, considering just who is the teller.  The Pardoner uses this story to speak out against