SLAP HAPPY LARRY

  • Short Story Study
  • Picturebooks
  • Privacy
  • The Voyage by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    The Voyage by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    December 12, 2018

    “The Voyage” is a short story by Katherine Mansfield, written 1921. Find it in The Garden Party collection. Katherine Mansfield always disliked intellectualism and aestheticism (one thing she had in common with her husband John Middleton Murray). She strove to combine a realist way of writing with personal and relatable symbols. “The Voyage” is a…

    Continue reading

  • Miss Brill by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    Miss Brill by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    December 11, 2018

    “Miss Brill” is a short story by Katherine Mansfield, written 1920, three years before she died. The emotional valence of “Miss Brill” is similar to that in “Bliss“. In both stories, a young woman starts off happy but then an unwelcome Anagnorisis sends her plunging into a downcast mood. In both stories, the reader must…

    Continue reading

  • “Good People” Is A Terrible Film

    “Good People” Is A Terrible Film

    December 10, 2018

    Good People is a 2014 film with a screenplay written by Kelly Masterson, based on the novel by Marcus Sakey. Good People is an excellent example of a film with terrible female characters, created by a roomful of men.

    Continue reading

  • Dumplin Film Storytelling Techniques

    Dumplin Film Storytelling Techniques

    December 9, 2018

    Dumplin is a 2018 young adult film based on the 2015 novel by Julie Murphy. PARATEXT Willowdean (‘Dumplin’), the plus-size teenage daughter of a former beauty queen, signs up for her mom’s Miss Teen Bluebonnet pageant as a protest that escalates when other contestants follow her footsteps, revolutionizing the pageant and their small Texas town.…

    Continue reading

  • Bliss by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    December 8, 2018

    “Bliss” is a short story by Katherine Mansfield and one of Mansfield’s last. “Bliss” is offered as an example of a ‘lyrical’ short story. From a writing point of view, “Bliss” is interesting for its struggle scene, in which the main character experiences purely positive emotions rather than the negative charge which normally goes hand-in-hand…

    Continue reading

  • The Wind Blows by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    The Wind Blows by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    December 7, 2018

    On the surface level, “The Wind Blows” by Katherine Mansfield is a coming-of-age short story about an adolescent girl (Matilda) who wakes up one morning, nervous and tense. While the wind blows outside, she gets ready for her music lesson. Before she leaves she has a minor disagreement with her mother. She has her music…

    Continue reading

  • A Dill Pickle by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    A Dill Pickle by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    December 5, 2018

    “A Dill Pickle” is a 1917 short story by Katherine Mansfield. Over the course of a single café scene, a woman meets up with a former beau. This is a feminist story about how men and women tend to communicate, and illuminates Mansfield’s deep interest in psychology. I’m in a restaurant in Cambridge and this…

    Continue reading

  • The Fly by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    The Fly by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    December 2, 2018

    “The Fly” is a short story by Katherine Mansfield, published 1922. CONNECTION TO MANSFIELD’S OWN LIFE Mansfield wrote “The Fly” in February 1922 as she was finding her tuberculosis treatment debilitating. She died in January of  1923, soon after its publication. Thirty-four seems young to be contemplating old age, and to write about an elderly…

    Continue reading

  • Reunion by John Cheever Short Story

    Reunion by John Cheever Short Story

    December 1, 2018

    “Reunion” is a short story by John Cheever, first published 1962 in The New Yorker. You can listen to it read by Richard Ford. SETTING OF REUNION As Richard Ford says, Grand Central Station is a place where anything could happen — any two people could meet. The story is set in the 1950s or…

    Continue reading

  • Burlesque Witches In Storytelling

    November 30, 2018

    Witches have a long history in storytelling, but they aren’t always scary. They aren’t always Baba Yaga types, sometimes murderous, sometimes helpful.

    Continue reading

  • The Ritual (2017) Film Study

    The Ritual (2017) Film Study

    November 29, 2018

    “The Ritual” is a horror film directed by David Bruckner, adapted by Joe Barton from Adam Nevill’s novel. Although this film is pretty standard in its tropes and structure, the CGI monster makes the viewing experience truly scary. This article says more about the monster and its basis in Swedish folklore.

    Continue reading

  • The Trip by Ezra Jack Keats Analysis

    The Trip by Ezra Jack Keats Analysis

    November 28, 2018

    The Trip by Ezra Jack Keats was first published 1978, which makes it 40 years old. This picture book is an excellent example of photography as motif, but using a peep show box instead.

    Continue reading

  • A Lion In The Meadow by Margaret Mahy and Jenny Williams Analysis

    A Lion In The Meadow by Margaret Mahy and Jenny Williams Analysis

    November 27, 2018

    Child characters ignored by adults — even in the midst of clear and present danger — are stock fodder and perennial favourites in children’s stories. A Lion In The Meadow by Margaret Mahy is a standout example.

    Continue reading

  • Junie B. Jones and Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria

    Junie B. Jones and Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria

    November 26, 2018

    Rejection sensitive dysphoria is an unpleasant emotion which should be more widely known. Not many people know how it feels, and even fewer know what it’s called. But Barbara Park’s Junie B. Jones is an excellent fictional example of a character who lives with these hard emotions.

    Continue reading

  • The Nightfish by Helen McCosker Analysis

    The Nightfish by Helen McCosker Analysis

    November 25, 2018

    The Nightfish is an Australian picture book written and illustrated by Helen McCosker. Published in 2006, this children’s story makes a good counterpoint to There’s A Sea In My Bedroom (1984).

    Continue reading

Previous Page
1 … 59 60 61 62 63 … 109
Next Page

SLAP HAPPY LARRY

Proudly powered by WordPress