In the short story “Seven Floors” by Dino Buzzati, the author skillfully creates suspense throughout the span of the story. The story follows the protagonist Giovanni Corte as he arrives at a mysterious hospital where he will be treated for a mild form of a disease. He is put on the seventh floor of the hospital and learns that the doctors choose which floor to put patients on by the severity of their disease. The patients on the first floor are lost causes and the patients on the seventh floor are the most mild cases. The short story follows Giovanni Corte as the doctors send him down floor by floor until he finds himself on the first floor. In the short story “Seven Floors”, the author incorporates imagery and symbolism that create suspense for the reader. Dino Buzzati incorporates imagery and detail into the short story. The hospital that Giovanni Corte is staying in is first described as “peaceful, welcoming, and reassuring” (Buzzati 131). The reader is able to picture the hospital as a building that is comfortable for the sick. However, throughout the rest of the story, the hospital becomes Giovanni’s worst fear. The author makes sure to include many times that Giovanni's …show more content…
When he first meets another patient, Giovanni learns more about the hospital’s significant floors. At the time, he is not afraid and “proceeded with his questioning with the light-heartedness one might adopt when speaking of tragic matters which don’t concern one” (Buzzati 133). This foreshadows the downgrading of floors as the short story goes on. Giovanni is unconcerned at the beginning of the story because he thinks that he does not have to worry about going down any floors. However, as the plot continues, what floor he is on becomes the only thing he is worried about. The suspense of the story deepens as Giovanni continues to descend floors until his death. The suspense used in the story leaves readers on the edge of their
The story of Giovanni and Lusanna has a lot more content then what the title portrays it to be. What I mean by that is that it is entirely based on the factual account of what happened
Imagine being trapped under the dirty rubble of a fallen building that was once a hospital. Shorty, a fifteen-year-old Haitian boy, is in this exact situation. As he lies on his tattered hospital bed, he feels anything but repose. Shorty is hungry, thirsty and suffering from a gunshot wound with the fallen hospital walls surrounding him. As he lies dying he reflects on his life and the truculent streets of Haiti.
In the novel, "The Upstairs Room" by Johanna Reiss, conflict between the Germans and the Jews, being the Holocaust, was amplified because it had now turned into a war, also known as World War One. Reiss tells the story of a family of five Jews (Rachel, Sinni, Annie, Mom, and Dad) and the mother is sick but the Germans are slowly starting to invade so they need to find a hiding place before the Germans capture them and it's too late. All the family is split up besides two of the sisters (Annie and Sinni) and the mother dies at the beginning because of sickness but all 3 sisters survive and are free again after the war. The Holocaust was found to be the responsibility of the Germans because they initiated the conflict between the Jews,who felt obligated to do what they were told in order to save their lives, and themselves.
The horror story is a uniquely interactive genre. Its main objective is to make the reader feel something, whether that be fear, anxiety, suspense, or any combination thereof. These feelings are evoked with the use of a monster, depending on the story it can be an external source, like a vampire or werewolf, or it could be something inside one of the characters, something in their psyche. In her story, “The Grave”, P.D.Cacek utilizes the literary elements of symbolism, imagery, and point of view.
Many people in society struggle to understand themselves and often times lack self-worth. The House on Mango Street, a novella by Sandra Cisneros, illustrates Esperanza’s life through her personal experiences with finding herself during her adolescent years. Esperanza’s negative view of herself slowly changes as she begins to focus on her larger community and her place within it. Through this, Cisneros shows that knowing and accepting where one comes from is an important part of growing up and determining one’s identity.
When you watch a tv show and do you find it annoying when they go to commercial break right before something important is about to happen? That is an example of suspense. You usually sit through the commercials to see what happens right? It keeps you hooked. The short story that I will be referring to and drawing examples of suspense from is Pickman’s Model by H.P. Lovecraft.
The short story, The Yellow Wallpaper, written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is a brilliant piece of fictional literature. The tale involves a mentally ill woman who is kept in a hideous, yellow room under the orders of her husband, John, who is a physician. The ill woman is conflicted due to the fact that the horrifying yellow wallpaper in the room is trapping a woman who she must help escape, but the sick woman is aware that she must get better in order to leave the terrifying, yellow room. The setting and personification applied in the short story, The Yellow Wallpaper, allows readers to develop an understanding of the sickness of the main character faces.
Students can face a daily struggle in school, as each one has to study for specific classes to reach a certain goal. Each potential student would then have to choose a goal where he or she would want to reach and, because of that, he or she would push on to escape some item or idea of his or her choosing such as poverty, family or home. Over thirty years ago, Sandra Cisneros published The House On Mango Street, which is a novel made up of vignettes about a little girl named Esperanza and her journey throughout a year’s worth of hardships as a Mexican female. Unlike her mother, she is able to go to school and has the ability to decide what she wants to be and where she wants to go. In the novel, school can be a source of new opportunities through
Laurie Halse Anderson’s historical fiction book, Fever 1793, takes place in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is the story of Matilda Cook (Mattie) and her family, and the hardships they go through in the time period when Yellow Fever had struck. In the book, it teaches that during tough times, it is important to step up and take charge. This can be seen through the impact on the characters and author’s craft.
After reading Isabelle Knockwood’s book Out of the Depths, residential schools really opened my eyes on what really happened to the Aboriginal peoples who were sent there. Knockwood did a very good job explaining what she went through during the long 11 years that she was at the residential school. It’s still hard to believe that human beings would do that to other humans. Knockwood was one of the many people sent to the Indian Residential School in Shubenacadie from 1936 to 1947. She grew up in Wolfville Nova Scotia along with her three brothers and one sister: Rosie, Henry, Joe, and Noel.
With nearly no communication between, or guidance from, the so called “leaders” of the hospital, the decisions made by the staff can be seen as quite flawed. Each ethical principle has been violated in this tragic situation at Memorial. Throughout the novel, the decisions made by Dr. Pou and a few others beg the reader to wonder what they would have done in this awful situation. It is not easy to decide what is the right and wrong decision, when hundreds of lives are at stake. The city of New Orleans knew that the storm was coming.
The notorious Stephen King was born in Portland, Maine in 1947. As a young child, King enjoyed reading scary comic books and even enjoyed scary movies such as the 1954 classic Creature from the Black Lagoon. By the time that King reached high school, he was writing all types of short stories. He even sent some of his stories to publishers of science-fiction magazines, but none were published. King liked to base many of his stories in small towns possibly due to the fact that he lived in small towns himself.
1. Esperanza doesn’t go with her family on their Sunday outings because she is ashamed. She doesn’t want to be starting out of a window like hungry people. 2. The metaphor that is used to represent the separation between the rich and the poor is that the rich will have their own big houses.
In “The Pit and the Pendulum”, the author manages to incorporate suspense into several parts of this story. One example is where it states, “I was sick—sick unto death with that long agony; and when they at length unbound me, and I was permitted to sit, I felt that my senses were leaving me. The sentence—the dread sentence of death—was the last of distinct accentuation which reached my ears. After that, the sound of the inquisitorial voices seemed merged in one dreamy indeterminate hum.” This shows how the author created suspense by not telling the reader about why the narrator was receiving a death sentence.
Suspense by Edgar Allen Poe Suspense is a writing style that authors use to make it so a reader is ahead of the characters in the story. Edgar Allen Poe profoundly used this technique in his story “Tell Tale Heart”. The narrator is psychotic and is particularly tormented by an old man’s ‘evil’ glass eye. He was willing to do close to anything to be rid of the eye, including murder.