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Riders on the storm
Friday, June 8, 2012
Christmas
Memory by Truman Capote:
Plot:
Their
family is poor, but Buddy is excited for Christmas. Then Sook (his elder
cousin) decides to make a fruitcake because of the time of the year, so both
Sook and Buddy collect pecans and then go buy whiskey for the fruitcake from a
man named Haha Jones who is an American Indian. With the many fruitcakes that
they make, they send them to people they have only met once in their life’s.
After they finished making the fruitcakes, they both start preparing for days
on both Christmas decorations and on getting presents for the family. Buddy has
hard time thinking for a present for Sook, so at the end, he gave her a kite
and she gave him a kite, as well. After opening their presents on Christmas
morning, they both go out and fly their kites. Then it goes on saying that this
was Buddy and Sook’s last Christmas together because Buddy was going to be sent
to military school. At the end, because of old age, she forgets all about who
Buddy is and dies.
The
protagonist character:
Sook:
kind at heart, friendly, funny, childish :<< The other Buddy died in
1880’s, when she was a child. She is still a child>>, adventurous.
Buddy:
responsible, friendly: <<we are each other’s best friend>>,
helpful, kind, adventurous.
Theme:
A
main theme from the last story, A Christmas Memory, is the childhood innocence
and being a child again. In the story, Buddy's poor family life does not seem
to affect him at all while he hangs out with her elderly cousin, Sook. As for
Sook, even with her old age, she still has a mind of a child. Also another
theme is the joy of friendship, in which both Sook and Buddy care so much as
friends and they have fun with everything that they do, from flying their homemade
kites to making the many fruitcakes for people that they have only met once.
Settings:
Christmas,Washington,New
York and the fun and freak museum.
The lottery by
Shirley Jackson:
Plot:
It’s a warm day, the 27th June;
villagers were sitting all together in the square to participate in a lottery
run by Mr. Summers, who officiates at all the big civic events. The children
were collecting stones like every summer until their parents call them to
order. Mrs. Hutchinson arrives late and chats briefly with her friend, Mrs.
Delacroix. People start looking at her because she had forgotten that today was
the day of the lottery. Mr. Summers calls each head of the house forward to a
black wooden box, where each selects a slip of paper. Once the men have chosen,
Mr. Summers allows everyone to open the paper and see who has been selected. It
is Bill Hutchinson. His wife immediately starts protesting – so we get the
sense that they're not about to win a couple million dollars. There are five
people total in the Hutchinson family. Mr. Summers places five slips of paper
into the box and each member of the family draws. Tess (Mrs. Hutchinson) draws
a slip of paper with a big black dot in the center. Not good. The villagers
advance on her, and it becomes crystal clear what the prize for the lottery
really is: a stoning. Tess protests in vain as the villagers attack her.
Theme:
The rituals and traditions we
unthinkingly follow as members of our society. Beyond critiquing the ways in
which custom obscures right and wrong, the lottery also becomes a way of
analyzing "traditional" social and gender divisions.
Tradition that appears to be as
vital to the villagers as New Year celebrations might be to us. Yet, subtle
hints throughout the story, as well as its shocking conclusion, indicate that
the villagers' tradition has become meaningless over time.
The ritual of the lottery appears to
be so naturalized that the villagers can't think rationally or critically about
what they are doing. It is only we, as outsiders, who can really confront the
madness of this ritual. In fact, it's the earnestness of the villagers that's
so particularly frightening.
Also, the short story discusses family,
in different: Their behaviors, the members that they lost in their family.
So Jackson is clearly drawing a line between the social place of
families (with their male heads of households and unfair distribution of luck)
and the emotional importance of family ties, which is a private matter.
Character:
Mr. Summers:
Unlike many characters in "The
Lottery," we find out a lot about Mr. Summers. He's married to "a
scold" and has no children, so the villagers feel sorry for him – even
though he runs a coal business and "[has] time and energy to devote to
civic activities (like the square dances, the teen club, the Halloween program,
and of course, the lottery". This tells you something about the priorities
of the villagers: they appear to place more emphasis on a traditional family
life than on the kind of worldly success that Mr. Summers has achieved. Mr.
Summers is quite the innovator: he wants to make a new black box because the
old one is getting shabby (a suggestion the villagers don't take to: "no
one liked to upset even as much tradition as was represented by the black
box" [5]). He has had more success getting the villagers to use strips of
paper instead of chips of wood when drawing for the lottery. He introduces this
notion in the name of progress, pointing out that chips of wood may have been
fine when the village was small, but now that the population is growing, they
needed to use something that would fit more easily into the box. Mr. Summers is
generally a wizard of efficiency: "he [seems] very proper and important as
he [talks] interminably to Mr. Graves and the Martins".
House of flowers by Truman Capote:
Plot:
The story is called, House of Flowers by Truman Capote. The short
story is about a young girl named Ottilie who lives with a group of friends
(baby and Rosita) in an elegant place called, Champs Elyseés. They enjoy their
time together. One day, Ottilie meats a man named Royal at a nearby cockfight.
She starts falling for him, even though ignoring the wealthy man named Mr.
Jamison who wants her. At the end, she and Royal marry. Then they move together
in to Royal’s home, which is located at the hills where they both live with
Royal’s grandmother, Old Bonaparte. Old Bonaparte wants Ottilie to leave \
Royal alone , so she does some cruel things to her, such as, putting a dead
cat’s head inside Ottilie’s basket to poisoning her food and others mean tricks.
Ottilie becomes clever and then kills the grandma by putting different things
into her food, for instance putting spiders to lizards. At the end, because of
believing that Old Bonaparte is haunting her, she has been tied to a tree, all
night. At the end, she decides to scare Royal while being tied to the tree.
The protagonist character:
Ottlie: Naïve, not materialistic ,nice because everybody loved in Champs
Elyseés, elegant:<<I have five silk dresses and a pair of green satin shoes […]maybe Mr. Jamison or
someone else will give me another bracelet>>,she don’t forgive people
easily.
Baby and Rosita: Helpful :<< the proprietress gave Baby and
Rosita a piece of advice: leave me alone, let her go, a few weeks and she will
be back>>, outgoing: <<she listened to the whistling and the
laughter and felt no desire to join in. Somebody would think you were thousand
years old said Baby and Rosita said: Ottlie, why don’t you come to the cockfight
with us? >>
Royal: Loyal, two-faced, brave, impatient.
Old bonapart: Ugly, evil, aloof:<<the old woman bruised her
here and there with vicious little
pinches and informed her grandson that this bride was too skiny:she will die
with her first.>> and <<A charred, lumpy creature, bowlegged as a
dwarf and bald as buzz, Old Bonaparte was much respected for miles around as makers of spells>>
Theme:
We have to think before we make big decision in our lives. The way
you treat others is the same you are treated back. , the theme of that story is that if you do something wrong to
someone, it will haunt you. In the story Ottilie kills off Old Bonaparte by
putting different animals into the older woman's food. With that, Ottilie
believed that her life would return to normal and that she would not have to
deal with the older woman. The only problem was that the older woman was still
haunting Ottilie, to the point where she believed that she was crazy. And with
that, she gets tied up to a tree because of what she believes she is seeing.
Setting:
Champs Elyseés, Royal’s house :<< Royal’s house was like a
house of flowers; wisteria sheltered the roof, a curtain of vines shaded the
windows, lilies bloomed at the door. From the windows one could see far, faint winking’s
of the sea ,as the house was high up a hill; here the sun burned hot but the
shadows were cold. Inside the house was always dark and cool, and the walls
rustled with pasted pink and green newspapers. There was only one room; it
contained a stove, a teetering mirror on top a marble table, and a brass bed
big enough for three fat men.>>
Tone:
The tone has to be loud, out spoken, lively, quite because of the
beautiful Ottilie. She was very patient about everything that happen in the
house at first, it was Old Bonaparte then, Royal.
The chaser by John Collier:
John Henry
Noyes Collier (3 May 1901 – 6 April 1980) was a British-born author and
screenplay writer best known for his short stories, many of which appeared in
The New Yorker from the 1930s to the 1950s like the chaser and many others
short novels.
Plot:
The story is
about Alan Austen and an old man. Alan went to Pell Street the moved up stairs.
Finally, he found what he was looking for. The old man was sitting on the
rocking chair, reading the newspaper. Alan gave him his card he received .The
man knew who he was saying :<< sit down, Mr. Austen>> politely. The
old men introduce to him what is this liquid cleanser as he says: >>call
it a glove- cleaner if you like>>.Alan was astonished about everything
the old man told him. Poison is expensive, that the young man can’t afford it:
<<for one teaspoon, which is sufficient, I ask five thousand dollars
>>.Austen asks about the love poison so he wins his love Diana back. The
men told him that liquid will make his love (Diana) falls madly in love with
him and she will give all her time and attention.The teenager believed every
word the old man ,leaving the old one with these final words on his lips:
<<thank you>>.
The protagonist
character:
Alan: Shy
because he is girlfriend centered, naïve and flexible/adaptable: he believes
every word the man says, good listener, polite: he is good with words, courage
(he wasn’t scared to meet the man).
The old man:
Helpful because he help everyone, money centered: he’s greedy (a teaspoon for
five thousand dollars, mysterious, liar, charismatic that the boy trusted his
words.
The theme:
People
shouldn’t trust anybody easily because it could affect us and putting us in trouble,
so we have to be careful from whom we take advice. To justify, my point of view
is that there is no ending to the story. The novelist let us think about what
gone happen to Diana because her lover’s naivety.
Settings:
The
neighborhood of the Pell Street, the old man’s scary house.
Tone:
The tone is
calm and quite because it’s a balance between the boys curiosity and naivety
and the old man mysterious and hidden evilness. The story has the same
objective as Snow white and the seven dwarfs, little red riding hood. Their
naivety makes them believe the bad people, the ones who deserve our mistrust.
As they I always believe that people who ever they are in their heart they are
good but it’s only the world make people put ugly masks, so they get what they
want from you.
Diamond Guitar by Truman Capote:
Truman Capote was an American author, many of whose short stories,
novels, plays, and nonfiction are recognized literary classics, including the
novella Breakfast at Tiffany's (1958) and the true crime novel In Cold Blood
(1966), which he labeled a "nonfiction novel."
Plot:
A Diamond Guitar is about a man named Mr. Schaeffer and his
relationship with a fellow inmate, Tico Feo. It starts off with Mr. Schaeffer,
a man who lives in a prison farm, serving a life sentence. He later starts to
be friend a fellow inmate by the name of Tico Feo. Tico has his diamond guitar
which he plays for the fellow inmates. Later in the story, it is mentioned that
both Tico Feo and Mr. Schaeffer are lovers. One night, Tico convinces Mr.
Schaeffer to escape from prision and the two men try to escape, but only Tico
succeeds and Mr. Schaeffer hurts his legs. At the end, Mr. Schaeffer is lying
down on his bed and touches Tico’s guitar, which is under the bed.
The protagonist character:
Mr. Schaeffer: a fifty year old man who is one of the few literate
prisoners, as such he is looked up to and feared by other prisoners. He has
graying red hair and is lean in build. He is a lone some :<< Schaeffer
himself does not receive mail, not even at Christmas; he seems to have no
friends beyond the prison, and he has none there-that is no particular friend.
>>he’s talented: <<His dolls are carved in separate sections, then put together with bits of
spring wire ;the arms and legs move, the head rolls.>> and
shy:<<Mr. Schaeffer was suddenly shy.>>
Tico Feo: a lively eighteen year old man from Cuba, who has blonde
hair and blue eyes. At times he is lazy, and known for being a terrible liar. <<He
had a fun loving face, nimble, clever; and looking at him, Mr. Schaeffer thought
of holidays and good times. >>He’s lovely: <<most of the men did
feel a love for him. >>
I noticed the undercurrent of homosexuality in two main characters relationship
:<<Except they did not combine their bodies or think to do so ,thought such things were not unknown at the farm ,they
were s lovers.>>
Setting:
A prison farm.
Theme:
Friendship, forgiving others. You don’t have to trust people
easily.
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