Tuesday, February 24, 2009

How to Talk to Your Mother (Notes)

In the short story How to Talk to Your Mother (Notes) Lorrie Moore uses a unique style of story teller that engages the reader in a different way. Slowly, she takes the reader back in time through each year of her life, pointing out important things that happened and exploring how her mother affected her and how they interacted.

I felt, as the story progressed, that I was slowly being pulled back in time with her. As I slowly went back in time with the narrator, I was thinking about my own life and how it compared to hers. I was drawn further and further into the story until I reached the beginning of her life. This reverse linear story telling made more interested in the story than if it had just been the story of her life from beginning to end.

The other interesting thing that Moore did was telling the story as commandments to the Reader. It is literally a how-to guide of her life. I thought this made the story interesting and got the plot across while imploring the reader to step in her shoes. She talks about abortion, the death, sex, and how all of this is related to the relationship she had with her mother. At the beginning she is trying to cope with this loss and a takes the reader through everything that she experienced.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Job History

The structure of Annie Proulx's Job History does not follow the typical structure of a short story. There is no real rising action and definitive climax. Rather, the structure of the story mimics real life. It follows one man through the ups and downs of his life, pointing out significant moments and referencing various historical events.

I think that this story could not have been told any other way. The chronological structure of the story emphasizes the message of the story. As the reader watches Leeland journey through life, a lot of things come up that seem sort of irrelevant, but often we find out later that they are very important. For example, it seems sort of like just a fun fact that he feeds his baby beer to keep it quiet. Of course, when the child has convulsions and suffers brain damage that seems kind of important. (Don't feed your baby beer.)

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Fiesta

Junot Diaz's short story Fiesta provides an insight into the life of a family who has been torn apart by the behavior of an abusive father. At different instances throughout the story, the narrator points out how each member of his family has been hurt by his father's antics. His mother is no longer happy and vibrant, but has become meek. Even his baby sister, cries whenever she hears the her father's voice.

I think that setting the story at a party was a very interesting choice. Even at a time when they should be celebrating and socializing with friends, Papi's affair is weighing heavily on the family. The party serves more as a reminder of what the family should be, as opposed to what they are.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Catastrophe

In his film version of Catastrophe, Pinter remained very loyal to Beckett's original script. There were only a few deviations. The first came when they assistant asked whether the protagonist's finger should be pointed. In the original, she suggests that his hands should be joined. Also, at the end there is not a roar of thunderous applause, just the sound of the assistant applauding.

I felt that the character of the assistant was the most different from the script to the video. In the film, she seemed authoritative and not timid or afraid to voice her opinions. Reading the play, I got the sense that the assistant was very meek and skittish. However, I didn't get that sense watching the video.