Other Stories Essays

  • Dr Seuss’ Horton Hears A Who and Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories

    582 Words  | 2 Pages

    Everyone is Important in Dr Seuss’ Horton Hears A Who and Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories In many of Dr Seuss’ children’s books, a character is struggling to get his voice heard. For example, in Horton Hears A Who and Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories, there are characters that couldn’t get anyone to listen to what they have to say. These characters teach us that no matter how big or small, everyone is important. Horton had thought he heard a sound but didn’t see anyone. Nearby was

  • The Baby Can Sing and Other Stories by Judith Slater

    1889 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Baby Can Sing and Other Stories by Judith Slater When a group of short stories is put together, in most cases there is a significant aspect in why the writer chooses certain stories and in a certain order, much like books of poetry. There is a reason to the writer's madness. If a writer has enough stories to fill a book that is so good it deserves to be printed and stay in print, they've probably written enough stories to fill two or more books and those that made it were what the author

  • The Necklace And Other Short Story Analysis

    764 Words  | 2 Pages

    Known as a master of the short story form, Guy de Maupassant was a French writer who had a number of works published. From books to short stories, they capture and demonstrate the lifestyle of a nineteenth century individual, particularly in France and Normandy, where most of the stories take place. The collection of eight stories, The Necklace and Other Short Stories, contains different elements that may or may not appeal to readers. War and life morals are elements that may appeal to readers alongside

  • Julio Cortazar's Blow-Up and Other Stories

    778 Words  | 2 Pages

    Blow-Up and Other Stories, the short stories Letter to a Young Lady in Paris, Continuity of Parks and Blow-Up demonstrate the theme of concealing reality. Cortazar uses closely intertwined imagery and symbolism throughout his short stories to conceal the overall message. In Letter to a Young Lady in Paris there is the allusion to repression of the main character as he writes about his continual problem of vomiting bunnies and his eventual suicide. The story Continuity of Parks, a man reads a story and finds

  • Comparing Kate Chopin's Lialacs And Other Stories

    746 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Kate Chopin’s book, Lialacs and Other Stories, there are a multitude of diverse characters, each with their own obstacle or problem they face. Because of this, some characters are viewed as dynamic, meaning they significantly change, or they are viewed as static, meaning they change little to none. In Chopin’s short story, “Athenaise”, the main character Athenaise is revealed as dynamic by the end of the story when battling her husband for nearly the whole story. In “Dead Men’s Shoes”, a good hearted

  • Comparing the Use of Images in The Other Wife and The Story of an Hour

    1157 Words  | 3 Pages

    Comparing the Use of Images in The Other Wife and The Story of an Hour The Other Wife and The Story of an Hour are two short stories both seemingly similar and contrasting in different ways. In Chopin’s story we see that Louise Mallard reveals her ironically natural feeling of joy and freedom following the news of her husband’s death. Louise’s sensation of freedom is conveyed through the use of vivid natural images and color. While in Colette’s story the two female protagonists contrastingly

  • Exploring John Steinbeck's Short Story, The Chrysanthemums: Is the Grass Really Greener on the Other Side?

    946 Words  | 2 Pages

    John Steinbeck used his short story, The Chrysanthemums, as a visual illustration to answer the adage, “Is the grass “really” greener on the other side?“ During The Great Depression, the American dream had become a nightmare. What was once the land of opportunity was now the land of desperation. What was once the land of hope and optimism had become the land of despair. The American people were questioning all the maxims on which they had based their lives - democracy, capitalism, individualism

  • Focus on Setting: Games at Twilight and Other Short Stories by Anita Desai

    1291 Words  | 3 Pages

    something happens or exists or the time place and conditions in which the action of a book, movie, etc takes place. In the short story collection called, “Games at Twilight and Other Short Stories”, written by Indian novelist, Anita Desai there is a huge focus placed on setting which plays a huge role in the development of the story. This essay would be based on three short stories from this particular collection; ‘Games at Twilight’, ‘Studies in the Park’ and ‘Pineapple Cake’. In each of these short pieces

  • The Role of Chronology in Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper and Faulkner's A Rose for Emily

    1220 Words  | 3 Pages

    chronology of a story is important in order for the reader to understand the work of literature. Many stories, such as "The Yellow Wallpaper" written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, have chronological events that happen in sequence, in order of the time they happened. Other stories, such as "A Rose for Emily" written by William Faulkner, have complicated chronologies. Faulkner uses "a complicatedly disjunctive time scheme that twists chronology almost beyond recognition" (Qtd. in Moore). His story begins

  • Girls at War, and Other Stories

    1042 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the book, Girls at War, and Other Stories, Chinua Achebe write several stories in which he portrays different examples of Nigerian customs, experiences and beliefs. He make a contrast between what are tradditional Nigerian customs and the view in modern Nigerian society. Also war is another topic that Achebe presents in the story “girls at war”.Without any doubt, the use of irony is widely use in all of his stories. The audience can clearly see the use of this theme in each of the characters

  • Linking Magical Realism and the Sublime in A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    Magical Realism and Sublime literature to one another in such a way that Magical Realism seems to be a genre of the Sublime. This short story was published with a collection of other stories entitled Leaf Storm and Other Stories in 1955. Gabriel Garcia Marquez, a native Columbian, has accomplished a great deal in the field of Magical Realism. This particular short story fulfills the requirements for Magical Realism and, at the same time, the Sublime. This fact leads one to believe that Magical Realism

  • Hesiod’s Theogony

    1326 Words  | 3 Pages

    audiences the traditional stories of the Greek gods as well as ancient Greek conceptions of the world. One particularly well known aspect of the Theogony, the section that tells the tale of Prometheus, is unique in that it has little intrinsic worth; its value is in its ability to enhance other stories and conceptions. Across the globe, people know well the story of the one who deceived Zeus and stole fire for man, but few recognize its role in Hesiod’s work as a whole. The story of Prometheus serves

  • Mary Austin: The Land of Little Rain

    1248 Words  | 3 Pages

    Rain The Basket Maker Mary Austin's The Basket Maker is, like all her other stories in the book, a very detailed description of the western landscape and its inhabitants. But this time she focused more on a single inhabitant, an Indian woman named Seyavi. It is rather difficult to really define the plot of the story. Though the story seems to focus on Seyavi's life and experiences she is not the one who tells that story. The narrator, who is omniscient, takes over the role as a medium between

  • Eveline, Dubliners and James Joyce

    1498 Words  | 3 Pages

    Eveline, Dubliners and James Joyce "Eveline" is the story of a young teenager facing a dilemma where she has to choose between living with her father or escaping with Frank, a sailor which she has been courting for some time. The story is one of fifteen stories written by James Joyce in a collection called "Dubliners". These stories follow a certain pattern that Joyce uses to express his ideas: "Joyce's focus in Dubliners is almost exclusively on the middle-class Catholics known to himself

  • Fading Away in Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio

    2088 Words  | 5 Pages

    explosive series of events on the final night in "The Strength of God." Escape needs little explanation‹flight from Winesburg occurs at the end of th... ... middle of paper ... ...derson gives it such a damning portrayal through the stories of those who have lived there. Outburst within the limits of Winesburg is not better by much, but it does possess certain superior qualities as a release than escape, and these advantages are, in fact, borne out for the characters in the book.

  • Momadays The Way To Rainy Mountain: Summary

    670 Words  | 2 Pages

    legend or a story of the Kiowa culture. However, this characteristic changes a bit as the book evolves, as does the style and feel of the stories. The first passage in the first numbered section describes the Kiowa creation myth. It tells that they came into the world through a hollow log. The next ones tell of a dog saving the life of a man, the story of how Tai-me became part of their culture, and other stories. These, especially in the first beginning of the first part, are stories which relate

  • Alex La Guma's The Lemon Orchard

    5282 Words  | 11 Pages

    first book, A Walk in the Night and Other Stories, in 1962 (Wade 15). "The Lemon Orchard," a story which appeared in this debut work, is a gripping piece about the horror and cruelty of racism. In the story, La Guma describes in chilling detail how a black teacher (who had sought legal redress for being beaten up by his principal and church minister) is roused from his sleep and led to a lemon orchard by four white men for whipping. At the beginning of the story, the moon is "hidden behind long, high

  • America's Fear of Evolution

    760 Words  | 2 Pages

    up all over the news. In hearing these debates, one usually thinks that it is only religious groups or fanatics trying to preserve their stories by eradicating the teaching of evolution. However, I think that culturally we have trouble accepting the theory of evolution because of other stories we tell ourselves. While religion does play a large role in our stories of creation, we have many ethics and ideals outside of faith that contrast with the theory of evolution. We may have trouble facing the

  • Another Ernest Hemingway

    1452 Words  | 3 Pages

    interpreted in different way, but there has never been so much written about his other stories. Well the Old Man and the Sea had more written about it than any of his other novels and there have never been so many different types of interpretations about his other novels. The Old Man and the Sea is a book in which can be interpreted in many different ways. Here you will read what many critics have composed about the story of a great writer, Ernest Hemingway. Many of the critics have the same outlook

  • Salvation

    1045 Words  | 3 Pages

    back at "Salvation" by Langston Hughes Our story begins like many other stories with a setting, main character, and a catchy introduction. Like many other stories it attracts the reader’s attention with something vague, making the person reading the story want to continue on further into the piece. This reading is like many other’s which portray real life situations, and show a different culture coming from a first person point of view. In the story, the main character, Langston, is a young boy