Short Story Unit English 1201 Click, Clack the Rattlebag - Neil Gaiman Listening Link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imLja6Emezo This short story will focus on: ● Suspense ● Foreshadowing ● Atmosphere ● Mood What literary elements are needed to make a good scary story? Make your notes here! English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment “Before you take me up to bed, will you tell me a story?” “Do you actually need me to take you up to bed?” I asked the boy. He thought for a moment. Then, with intense seriousness, “Yes, actually I think you do. It’s because of, I’ve finished my homework, and so it’s my bedtime, and I am a bit scared. Not very scared. Just a bit. “But it is a very big house, and lots of times the lights don’t work and it’s a sort of dark.” I reached over and tousled his hair. “I can understand that,” I said. “It is a very big old house.” He nodded. We were in the kitchen, where it was light and warm. I put down my magazine on the kitchen table. “What kind of story would you like me to tell you?” “Well,” he said, thoughtfully. “I don’t think it should be too scary, because then when I go up to bed, I will just be thinking about monsters the whole time. But if it isn’t just a little bit scary then I won’t be interested. And you make up scary stories, don’t you? I know she says that’s what you do.” “She exaggerates. I write stories, yes. Nothing that’s been published, yet, though. And I write lots of different kinds of stories.” “But you do write scary stories?” “Yes.” The boy looked up at me from the shadows by the door, where he was waiting. “Do you know any stories about Click-clack the Rattlebag?” “I don’t think so.” “Those are the best sorts of stories.” 1 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment “Do they tell them at your school?” He shrugged. “Sometimes.” “What’s a Click-clack the Rattlebag story?” He was a precocious child, and was unimpressed by his sister’s boyfriend’s ignorance. You could see it on his face. “Everybody knows them.” “I don’t,” I said, trying not to smile. He looked at me as if he was trying to decide whether or not I was pulling his leg. He said, “I think maybe you should take me up to my bedroom, and then you can tell me a story before I go to sleep, but a very not-scary story because I’ll be up in my bedroom then, and it’s actually a bit dark up there, too.” I said, “Shall I leave a note for your sister, telling her where we are?” “You can. But you’ll hear when they get back. The front door is very slammy.” We walked out of the warm and cosy kitchen into the hallway of the big house, where it was chilly and draughty and dark. I flicked the light-switch, but nothing happened. “The bulb’s gone,” the boy said. “That always happens.” Our eyes adjusted to the shadows. The moon was almost full, and blue-white moonlight shone in through the high windows on the staircase, down into the hall. “We’ll be all right,” I said. “Yes,” said the boy, soberly. “I am very glad you’re here.” He seemed less precocious now. His hand found mine, and he held onto my fingers comfortably, trustingly, as if he’d known me all his life. I felt responsible and adult. I did not know if the feeling I had for his sister, who was my girlfriend, was love, not yet, but I liked that the child treated me as one of the family. I felt like his big brother, and I stood taller, and if there was something unsettling about the empty house I would not have admitted it for worlds. The stairs creaked beneath the threadbare stair-carpet. “Click-clacks,” said the boy, “are the best monsters ever.” “Are they from television?” “I don’t think so. I don’t think any people know where they come from. Mostly they come from the dark.” “Good place for a monster to come.” 2 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment “Yes.” We walked along the upper corridor in the shadows, walking from patch of moonlight to patch of moonlight. It really was a big house. I wished I had a flashlight. “They come from the dark,” said the boy, holding onto my hand. “I think probably they’re made of dark. And they come in when you don’t pay attention. That’s when they come in. And then they take you back to their… not nests. What’s a word that’s like nests, but not?” “House?” “No. It’s not a house.” “Lair?” He was silent. Then, “I think that’s the word, yes. Lair.” He squeezed my hand. He stopped talking. “Right. So they take the people who don’t pay attention back to their lair. And what do they do then, your monsters? Do they suck all the blood out of you, like vampires?” He snorted. “Vampires don’t suck all the blood out of you. They only drink a little bit. Just to keep them going, and, you know, flying around. Click-clacks are much scarier than vampires.” “I’m not scared of vampires,” I told him. “Me neither. I’m not scared of vampires either. Do you want to know what Click-clacks do? They drink you,” said the boy. “Like a Coke?” “Coke is very bad for you,” said the boy. “If you put a tooth in Coke, in the morning, it will be dissolved into nothing. That’s how bad coke is for you and why you must always clean your teeth, every night.” I’d heard the Coke story as a boy, and had been told, as an adult, that it wasn’t true, but was certain that a lie which promoted dental hygiene was a good lie, and I let it pass. “Click-clacks drink you,” said the boy. “First they bite you, and then you go all icky inside, and all your meat and all your brains and everything except your bones and 3 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment your skin turns into a wet, milk-shakey stuff and then the Click-clack sucks it out through the holes where your eyes used to be.” “That’s disgusting,” I told him. “Did you make it up?” We’d reached the last flight of stairs, all the way into the big house. “No.” “I can’t believe you kids make up stuff like that.” “You didn’t ask me about the rattlebag,” he said. “Right. What’s the rattlebag?” “Well,” he said, sagely, a small voice from the darkness beside me, “once you’re just bones and skin, they hang you up on a hook, and you rattle in the wind.” “So what do these Click-clacks look like?” Even as I asked him, I wished I could take the question back, and leave it unasked. I thought: Huge spidery creatures. Like the one in the shower this morning. I’m afraid of spiders. I was relieved when the boy said, “They look like what you aren’t expecting. What you aren’t paying attention to.” We were climbing wooden steps now. I held on to the railing on my left, held his hand with my right, as he walked beside me. It smelled like dust and old wood, that high in the house. The boy’s tread was certain, though, even though the moonlight was scarce. “Do you know what story you’re going to tell me, to put me to bed?” he asked. “It doesn’t actually have to be scary.” “Not really.” “Maybe you could tell me about this evening. Tell me what you did?” “That won’t make much of a story for you. My girlfriend just moved into a new place on the edge of town. She inherited it from an aunt or someone. It’s very big and very old. I’m going to spend my first night with her, tonight, so I’ve been waiting for an hour or so for her and her housemates to come back with the wine and an Indian takeaway.” “See?” said the boy. There was that precocious amusement again. But all kids can be insufferable sometimes, when they think they know something you don’t. It’s probably 4 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment good for them. “You know all that. But you don’t think. You just let your brain fill in the gaps.” He pushed open the door to the attic room. It was perfectly dark, now, but the opening door disturbed the air, and I heard things rattle gently, like dry bones in thin bags, in the slight wind. Click. Clack. Click. Clack. Like that. I would have pulled away, then, if I could, but small, firm fingers pulled me forward, unrelentingly, into the dark. 1) What is the mood of this story? How does Gaiman use foreshadowing to establish the mood? Support and explain your answer with two references from the story. 2. Write your own scary story. Try to use the literary devices Gaiman does to make the writing great. Here’s the catch, your story can only be 2-4 lines in length! Work in partners or in groups, share your stories with your friends. Example: “I begin tucking him into bed and he tells me, ‘Daddy, check for monsters under my bed.’ I look underneath for his amusement and see him, another him, under the bed, staring back at me quivering and whispering, “Daddy, there’s somebody on my bed.” 5 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment “Growing up with cats and dogs, I got used to the sounds of scratching at my door while I slept. Now that I live alone, it is much more unsettling.” 3. What is the climax of the story? What techniques does Gaiman use to build the story to this point? Explain giving two techniques and references to the story. 6 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment 4. At the end of the story there is a clear example of situational irony. Explain what irony is and how it happened in the story. Use examples why this ending took you for a turn! Lather and Nothing Else - Hernando Tellez Sightlines 10 - Page 342 This short story will focus on: ● Conflict - Internal, external 1. The barber undergoes a significant internal conflict: whether to kill the captain or not. In the chart below, list at least seven reasons “for” killing Captain Torres and seven reasons “against” killing the Captain. Reasons FOR killing Captain Torres Reasons AGAINST killing Captain Torres 1. 1. 7 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment 2. 2. 3. 3. 4. 4. 5. 5. 6. 6. 7. 7. . How does internal conflict help develop the theme of this story? Explain, using two references to the story. 8 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment 3. In the last paragraph, the Captain tells the barber that, “it’s not easy to kill. I know what i’m talking about.” Write a personal response explaining whether you think it would be easy to kill another person. Consider if killing is ever justified. Fish Cheeks - Amy Tan Reading Link - https://msmoore.wordpress.com/doc/the-naming-of-names/ This short story will focus on: ● ● ● Subject Tone Narrative writing I fell in love with the minister’s son the winter I turned fourteen. He was not Chinese, but as white as Mary in the manger. For Christmas I prayed for this blond-haired boy, Robert, and a slim new American nose. 9 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment When I found out that my parents had invited the minister’s family over for Christmas Eve dinner, I cried. What would Robert think of our shabby Chinese Christmas? What would he think of our noisy Chinese relatives who lacked proper American manners? What terrible disappointment would he feel upon seeing not a roasted turkey and sweet potatoes but Chinese food? On Christmas Eve I saw that my mother had outdone herself in creating a strange menu. She was pulling black veins out of the backs of fleshy prawns. The kitchen was littered with appalling mounds of raw food: A slimy rock cod with bulging eyes that pleaded not to be thrown into a pan of hot oil. Tofu, which looked like stacked wedges of rubbery white sponges. A bowl soaking dried fungus back to life. A plate of squid, their backs crisscrossed with knife markings so they resembled bicycle tires. And then they arrived – the minister’s family and all my relatives in a clamor of doorbells and rumpled Christmas packages. Robert grunted hello, and I pretended he was not worthy of existence. Dinner threw me deeper into despair. My relatives licked the ends of their chopsticks and reached across the table, dipping them into the dozen or so plates of food. Robert and his family waited patiently for platters to be passed to them. My relatives murmured with pleasure when my mother brought out the whole steamed fish. Robert grimaced. Then my father poked his chopsticks just below the fisheye and plucked out the soft meat. “Amy, your favorite,” he said, offering me the tender fish cheek. I wanted to disappear. At the end of the meal my father leaned back and belched loudly, thanking my mother for her fine cooking. “It’s a polite Chinese custom to show you are satisfied,” explained my father to our astonished guests. Robert was looking down at his plate with a reddened face. The minister managed to muster up a quiet burp. I was stunned into silence for the rest of the night. 10 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment After everyone had gone, my mother said to me, “You want to be the same as American girls on the outside.” She handed me an early gift. It was a miniskirt in beige tweed. “But inside you must always be Chinese. You must be proud you are different. Your only shame is to have shame.” And even though I didn’t agree with her then, I knew that she understood how much I had suffered during the evening’s dinner. It wasn’t until many year later – long after I had gotten over my crush on Robert – that I was able to fully appreciate her lesson and the true purpose behind our particular menu. For Christmas Eve that year, she had chosen all my favorite foods. 1. Who is the narrator of this piece? How does she develop as a character? Discuss, making reference to the story. 2. What is the writer's tone, or attitude, toward the subject? Use examples from the text to support your answer. Note** It's possible for the tone to change if the narrator has an epiphany. (Epiphany is that moment in the story where a character achieves realization, awareness or a feeling of knowledge after which events are seen through the prism of this new light in the story.) 11 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment 3. What is the theme of this story? Explain, giving reference to the story. Is the theme the same as the lesson learned by the narrator? 4. Take a perspective like that of the minster’s son, Robert: Write a narrative essay about a time when you had to adjust to participating in a culture different from your own. It could be a meal, a wedding or other rite of passage,a religious ceremony, a trip to another country. What did you learn from the experience, about yourself and others? 12 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment On The Sidewalk Bleeding - Ethan Hunter This short story will focus on: ● Characterization ● Symbolism ● Stereotypes The boy lay on the sidewalk bleeding in the rain. He was sixteen years old, and he wore a bright purple jacket, and the lettering across the back of the jacket read THE ROYALS. The boy's name was Andy and the name was delicately scripted in black thread on the front of the jacket, just over the heart. ANDY.. He had been stabbed ten minutes ago. The knife entered just below his rib cage and had been drawn across his body violently, tearing a wide gap in his flesh. He lay on the sidewalk with the March rain drilling his jacket and drilling his body and washing away the blood that poured from his open wound. He had known excruciating pain when the knife had torn across his body, and then sudden comparative relief when the blade was pulled away. He had heard the voice saying, 'That's for you Royal! " and then the sound of footsteps hurrying into the rain, and then he had fallen to the sidewalk, clutching his stomach, trying to stop the flow of blood. He tried to yell for help, but he had no voice. He did not know why his voice had deserted him, or why there was an open hole in his body from which his life ran readily, 13 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment steadily, or why the rain had become so suddenly fierce. It was 11:13 p.m. but he did not know the time. There was another thing he did not know. He did not know he was dying. He lay on the sidewalk, bleeding, and he thought only: That was a fierce rumble. They got me good that time, but he did not know he was dying. He would have been frightened had he known. In his ignorance he lay bleeding and wishing he could cry out for help, but there was no voice in his throat. There was only the bubbling of blood from between his lips whenever he opened his mouth to speak. He lay in his pain, waiting, waiting for someone to find him. He could hear the sound of automobile tires hushed on the rain swept streets, far away at the other end of the long alley. He lay with his face pressed to the sidewalk, and he could see the splash of neon far away at the other end of the alley, tinting the pavement red and green, slickly brilliant in the rain. He wondered if Laura would be angry. He had left the jump to get a package of cigarettes. He had told her he would be back in a few minutes, and then he had gone downstairs and found the candy store closed. He knew that Alfredo's on the next block would be open. He had started through the alley, and that was when he had been ambushed. He could hear the faint sound of music now, coming from a long, long way off. He wondered if Laura was dancing, wondered if she had missed him yet. Maybe she thought he wasn't coming back. Maybe she thought he'd cut out for good. Maybe she had already left the jump and gone home. He thought of her face, the brown eyes and the jet-black hair, and thinking of her he forgot his pain a little, forgot that blood was rushing from his body. Someday he would marry Laura. Someday he would marry her, and they would have a lot of kids, and then they would get out of the neighborhood. They would move to a clean project in the Bronx, or maybe they would move to Staten Island. When they were married, when they had kids. He heard footsteps at the other end of the alley, and he lifted his cheek from the sidewalk and looked into the darkness and tried to cry out, but again there was only a soft hissing bubble of blood on his mouth. The man came down the alley. He had not seen Andy yet. He walked, and then stopped to lean against the brick of the building, and then walked again. He saw Andy then and came toward him, and he stood over him for a long time, the minutes ticking, ticking, watching him and not speaking. Then he said, "What's the matter, buddy'?" 14 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment Andy could not speak, and he could barely move. He lifted his face slightly and looked up at the man, and in the rain swept alley he smelled the sickening odor of alcohol. The man was drunk. The man was smiling. "Did you fall down, buddy?" he asked. "You must be as drunk as I am." He squatted alongside Andy. 'You gonna catch cold there," he said. "What's the matter? You like layin' in the wet?" Andy could not answer. The rain spattered around them. You like a drink?" Andy shook his head. "I gotta bottle. Here," the man said. He pulled a pint bottle from his inside jacket pocket. Andy tried to move, but pain wrenched him back flat against the sidewalk. Take it," the man said. He kept watching Andy. "Take it." When Andy did not move, he said, "Nev' mind, I'll have one m'self." He tilted the bottle to his lips, and then wiped the back of his hand across his mouth. "You too young to be drinkin' anyway. Should be 'shamed of yourself, drunk and layin 'in a alley, all wet. Shame on you. I gotta good mind to call a cop." Andy nodded. Yes, he tried to say. Yes, call a cop. Please call one. "Oh, you don' like that, huh?" the drunk said. "You don' wanna cop to fin' you all drunk an' wet in an alley, huh: Okay, buddy. This time you get off easy." He got to his feet. "This time you get off easy," he said again. He waved broadly at Andy, and then almost lost his footing. "S'long, buddy," he said. Wait, Andy thought. Wait, please, I'm bleeding. "S'long," the drunk said again, "I see you around," and the he staggered off up the alley. Andy lay and thought: Laura, Laura. Are you dancing:? The couple came into the alley suddenly. They ran into the alley together, running from the rain, the boy holding the girl's elbow, the girl spreading a newspaper over her head to protect her hair. Andy watched them run into the alley laughing, and then duck into the doorway not ten feet from him. "Man, what rain!" the boy said. 'You could drown out there." 15 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment "I have to get home," the girl said. "It's late, Freddie. I have to get home." "We got time," Freddie said. 'Your people won't raise a fuss if you're a little late. Not with this with kind of weather." "It's dark," the girl said, and she giggled. 'Yeah," the boy answered, his voice very low. "Freddie . . . . ? "Um?" "You're ... standing very close to me." "Um." There was a long silence. Then the girl said, "Oh," only that single word, and Andy knew she had been kissed , and he suddenly hungered for Laura's mouth. It was then that he wondered if he would ever kiss Laura again. It was then that he wondered if he was dying. No, he thought, I can't be dying, not from a little street rumble, not from just being cut. Guys get cut all the time in rumbles. I can't be dying. No, that's stupid. That don't make any sense at all. "You shouldn't," the girl said. "Why not?" "Do you like it?" "Yes." "So?" "I don't know." "I love you, Angela," the boy said. "I love you, too, Freddie," the girl said, and Andy listened and thought: I love you, Laura. Laura, I think maybe I'm dying. Laura, this is stupid but I think maybe I'm dying. Laura, I think I'm dying He tried to speak. He tried to move. He tried to crawl toward the doorway. He tried to make a noise, a sound, and a grunt came, a low animal grunt of pain. "What was that?" the girl said, suddenly alarmed, breaking away from the boy. 16 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment "I don't know," he answered. "Go look, Freddie." "No. Wait." Andy moved his lips again. Again the sound came from him. Freddie!" "What?" "I'm scared." "I'll go see," the boy said. He stepped into the alley. He walked over to where Andy lay on the ground. He stood over him, watching him. "You all right?" he asked. "What is it?" Angela said from the doorway. "Somebody's hurt," Freddie said. "Let's get out of here," Angela said. "No. Wait a minute." He knelt down beside Andy. "You cut?" he asked. Andy nodded. The boy kept looking at him. He saw the lettering on the jacket then. THE ROYALS. He turned to Angela. "He's a Royal," he said. "Let's what. . . .what . . . do you want to do, Freddie?" "I don't know. I don't know. I don't want to get mixed up in this. He's a Royal. We help him, and the Guardians'll be down on our necks. I don't want to get mixed up in this, Angela." "Is he . . . is he hurt bad?" "Yeah, it looks that way." "What shall we do?" "I don't know." 17 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment "We can't leave him here in the rain," Angela hesitated. "Can we?" "If we get a cop, the Guardians'll find out who," Freddie said. "I don't know, Angela. I don't know." Angela hesitated a long time before answering. Then she said, "I want to go home, Freddie. My people will begin to worry." "Yeah," Freddie said. He looked at Andy again. "You all right?" he asked. Andy lifted his face from the sidewalk, and his eyes said: Please, please help me, and maybe Freddie read what his eyes were saying, and maybe he didn't. Behind him, Angela said, "Freddie, let's get out of here! Please!" Freddie stood up. He looked at Andy again, and then mumbled, "I'm sorry." He took Angela's arm and together they ran towards the neon splash at the other end of the alley. Why, they're afraid of the Guardians, Andy thought in amazement. By why should they be? I wasn't afraid of the Guardians. I never turkeyed out of a rumble with the Guardians. I got heart. But I'm bleeding. The rain was soothing somehow. It was a cold rain, but his body was hot all over, and the rain helped cool him. He had always liked rain. He could remember sitting in Laura's house one time, the rain running down the windows, and just looking out over the street, watching the people running from the rain. That was when he'd first joined the Royals. He could remember how happy he was when the Royals had taken him. The Royals and the Guardians, two of the biggest. He was a Royal. There had been meaning to the title. Now, in the alley, with the cold rain washing his hot body, he wondered about the meaning. If he died, he was Andy. He was not a Royal. He was simply Andy, and he was dead. And he wondered suddenly if the Guardians who had ambushed him and knifed him had ever once realized he was Andy? Had they known that he was Andy or had they simply known that he was Royal wearing a purple silk jacket? Had they stabbed him, Andy, or had they only stabbed the jacket and the title and what good was the title if you were dying? I'm Andy, he screamed wordlessly, I'm Andy. An old lady stopped at the other end of the alley. The garbage cans were stacked there, beating noisily in the rain. The old lady carried an umbrella with broken ribs, carried it like a queen. She stepped into the mouth of the alley, shopping bag over one arm. She lifted the lids of the garbage cans. She did not hear Andy grunt because she was a little deaf and because the rain was beating on the cans. She collected her string 18 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment and her newspapers, and an old hat with a feather on it from one of the garbage cans, and a broken footstool from another of the cans. And then she replaced the lids and lifted her umbrella high and walked out of the alley mouth. She had worked quickly and soundlessly, and now she was gone. The alley looked very long now. He could see people passing at the other end of it, and he wondered who the people were, and he wondered if he would ever get to know them, wondered who it was of the Guardians who had stabbed him, who had plunged the knife into his body. "That's for you, Royal!" the voice had said. "That's for you, Royal!" Even in his pain, there had been some sort of pride in knowing he was a Royal. Now there was no pride at all. With the rain beginning to chill him, with the blood pouring steadily between his fingers, he knew only a sort of dizziness. He could only think: I want to be Andy. It was not very much to ask of the world. He watched the world passing at the other end of the alley. The world didn't know he was Andy. The world didn't know he was alive. He wanted to say, "Hey, I'm alive! Hey, look at me! I'm alive! Don't you know I'm alive? Don't you know I exist?" He felt weak and very tired. He felt alone, and wet and feverish and chilled. He knew he was going to die now. That made him suddenly sad. He was filled with sadness that his life would be over at sixteen. He felt all at once as if he had never done anything, never seen anything, never been anywhere. There were so many things to do. He wondered why he'd never thought of them before, wondered why the rumbles and the jumps and the purple jackets had always seemed so important to him before. Now they seemed like such small things in a world he was missing, a world that was rushing past at the other end of the alley. I don't want to die, he thought. I haven't lived yet. It seemed very important to him that he take off the purple jacket. He was very close to dying, and when they found him, he did not want them to say, "Oh, it's a Royal." With great effort, he rolled over onto his back. He felt the pain tearing at his stomach when he moved. If he never did another thing, he wanted to take off the jacket. The jacket had only one meaning now, and that was a very simple meaning. If he had not been wearing the jacket, he wouldn't have been stabbed. The knife had not been plunged in hatred of Andy. The knife hated only the purple jacket. The jacket was as stupid meaningless thing that was robbing him of his life. He lay struggling with the shiny wet jacket. His arms were heavy. Pain ripped fire across his body whenever he moved. But he squirmed and fought and twisted until one arm was free and then the other. He rolled away from the jacket and lay quite still, 19 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment breathing heavily, listening to the sound of his breathing and the sounds of the rain and thinking: Rain is sweet, I'm Andy. She found him in the doorway a minute past midnight. She left the dance to look for him, and when she found him, she knelt beside him and said, "Andy, it's me, Laura." He did not answer her. She backed away from him, tears springing into her eyes, and then she ran from the alley. She did not stop running until she found a cop. And now, standing with the cop, she looked down at him. The cop rose and said, "He's dead." All the crying was out of her now. She stood in the rain and said nothing, looking at the purple jacket that rested a foot away from his body. The cop picked up the jacket and turned it over in his hands. "A Royal, huh?" he said. She looked at the cop and, very quietly, she said, "His name is Andy." The cop slung the jacket over his arm. He took out his black pad, and he flipped it open to a blank page. "A Royal, " he said. Then he began writing. 1. How are symbols used to develop them theme of this story? Explain using two references to the story. 20 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment 2. How does the author use internal conflict to develop the character of Andy? Explain how he develops, making two references to internal conflict in the story. 3. Too often people are either separated or brought together by stereotypes. It is in a sense only natural to assume things about others based on their looks, jobs, personality traits, who they voted for, etc. Write a personal response about a time when you were stereotyped or when you accidently stereotyped others. 21 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment Would you like to reconnect? - Joanne Harris Reading found in the Nelson text, Pg. 210 22 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment This short story will focus on: ● Point of view ● Theme 1. Why does Harrison tell her story in the first person, form the point of view of the mother? How effective would the story have been if it had been told from the third person point of view? 2. How does the author use literary devices to develop the theme? Explain using two literary devices of your choice and examples of them in the story. 23 English 1201Short StoriesAlternate Assignment 3. When people pass away in today’s world their Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram remain. Write a personal response whether you think that people ever truly die online. Is that a good or bad thing for people who are left to mourn? 24