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Tag: Short Stories

Gooseberries by Anton Chekhov – Summary

Posted on October 17, 2021October 17, 2021 by JL Admin

Shelter from the Storm  The story “Gooseberries” begins on a dreary, overcast day as Ivan Ivanich and Bourkin are walking through the countryside. When it starts to rain, Bourkin suggests they go to a nearby friend’s house Anton Chekhov where they can get shelter from the weather. Upon arriving at the mill owned by Aliokhin,…

The Eskimo Connection – Analysis

Posted on October 17, 2021October 17, 2021 by JL Admin

Hisaye Yamamoto’s “The Eskimo Connection” is told through the eyes of Emiko Toyama, a poet who self-deprecatingly refers to herself simply as “an aging Nisei widow” with very little to offer a young prison pen pal. She never directly calls herself a poet in the story, although art and writing have certainly played an important…

The Eskimo Connection – Setting

Posted on October 17, 2021October 17, 2021 by JL Admin

Japanese Internment Camps During World War II  After the Japanese attack on American ships at Pearl Harbor in 1941, sentiment grew in support of relocating all Japanese Americans living along the West Coast to the interior of the country. Many in the western states, as well as those holding high positions in the United States…

The Eskimo Connection – Literary Devices

Posted on October 16, 2021October 16, 2021 by JL Admin

Narrative Form  Given that the bulk of Yamamoto’s story is about the letters written between Alden and Emiko, “The Eskimo Connection” is written almost as an epistle—a writing form that presents letters written to someone or written between two or more people. (According to one of the letters, Alden has paraphrased the biblical epistles of…

The Eskimo Connection – Themes

Posted on October 16, 2021October 16, 2021 by JL Admin

Loneliness  In “The Eskimo Connection” both Alden and Emiko are victims of loneliness, although in different ways. Emiko’s husband is dead, and she describes herself in terms of what she has lost: her husband and her poetry. As “an aging Nisei widow in Los Angeles with several children, three still at home, whose main avocation…

The Eskimo Connection – Characters

Posted on October 15, 2021October 15, 2021 by JL Admin

Emiko Toyama  In the story “The Eskimo Connection,” Emiko is a Nisei poet and a widow living in Los Angeles in the 1970s. Emiko remembers living in one of the internment/relocation camps for Japanese Americans during World War II.  Emiko receives a letter from a young Eskimo prisoner, Alden, asking her to critique his essay….

The Eskimo Connection – Summary

Posted on October 15, 2021October 15, 2021 by JL Admin

1975  “The Eskimo Connection” begins in the late winter of 1975, when Emiko Toyama, a Nisei poet and widow living in Los Angeles, receives a letter from a young Eskimo prisoner-patient at a federal penitentiary in the Midwest. Alden Ryan Walunga has read one of Emiko’s poems in an old AsianAmerican magazine and wants her…

Don’t Look Now – Daphne du Maurier – Analysis

Posted on October 15, 2021October 15, 2021 by JL Admin

Daphne du Maurier’s short story, or novella, “Don’t Look Now” is a tale of the supernatural, full of mysterious premonitions, blind soothsayers, and messages from the next life. Critics refer to it as a fine example of contemporary romantic horror writing, and the film made from the story sent chills up the spines of many…

Don’t Look Now – Daphne du Maurier – Setting

Posted on October 14, 2021October 14, 2021 by JL Admin

Venice  Venice is an ancient seaport city in northeastern Italy, famed for its beautiful buildings and art and considered one of the most romantic cities in the world. It is a favorite destination of honeymooners and lovers. The city covers more than one hundred islands separated by 177 canals. The Grand Canal, on which John…

Don’t Look Now – Daphne du Maurier – Literary Devices

Posted on October 14, 2021October 14, 2021 by JL Admin

Foreshadowing  Almost mimicking the story’s visions and premonitions, du Maurier has filled the narrative with moments that point to some future event. She uses foreshadowing to indicate that trouble is coming soon, such as when John sees what he thinks is a small child wearing a hooded jacket fleeing danger through the streets and jumping…

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