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How to study "The best short stories" cover

How to study "The best short stories"

Chapter 21: CHAUTONVILLE
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About This Book

A practical handbook analyzes a series of annual best-short-story anthologies and extracts the editorial values and technical habits behind successful short fiction. It surveys selected pieces to illustrate structure, point of view, unity, and regional color, and supplements close readings with author testimony and classroom experience. The work supplies study questions, exercises, and concrete advice on revision, pacing, and economy of form while stressing the need to balance artistic aims with the business realities of publication. Its aim is to train critical reading and disciplined practice for aspiring writers and students.

CHAUTONVILLE

Central Idea. The power of music is supreme.

The Struggle. The music-force opposed to the men’s disinclination to charge. Is there any doubt that in singing the men “home” Chautonville turned them toward the enemy?

The Setting. What are the place and the time of the action? Point out details that keep war dominant.

Presentation. Who is the narrator?

Characters. Who, specifically, is Chautonville? Why is the description of his voice put before his physical personality? Value of the contrast?

Details. What determination of the narrator is used to create suspense? How is the determination overcome?


Try to recall other examples, in literature, of the power of music. Study its whimsical use in Kipling’s “The Village That Voted the Earth Was Flat”; its use to recall the past in O. Henry’s “The Church with an Overshot Wheel.” See how it is employed in connection with the climax in Mary Synon’s “The Wallaby Track,” and in Kipling’s “The Brushwood Boy.”

What tonal values exist in the suggestion of sounds?

What relation exists between the rhythm and the theme?

Is the story pre-eminently one of theme, character, or setting?