Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Role Of The Narrator In Fiction.
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I always loved the sort of novel that begins in the Club where an Old Member, who doesn't usually say much, taps out his pipe and says, "That reminds me of an incident from my youth... a rather strange tale, which you may believe or not. All I can say is that it made a great impression on me."
Young McPherson winked at the company, took a sip of port, and said, " Come on, Dad, tell us all about it. We could do with one of your yarns to finish off the evening."
And so the Old Member begins.."It all started during the troubles with the Afghans back in '79..."
Young McPherson winked at the company, took a sip of port, and said, " Come on, Dad, tell us all about it. We could do with one of your yarns to finish off the evening."
And so the Old Member begins.."It all started during the troubles with the Afghans back in '79..."
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I also love this way of presenting a narrative. You are personally engaged, and trust the narrator, from the beginning. (The exception to this is the Ag. Christie where the narrator is the villain.) The structure also serves to hold often complex tales told over many years in place.
I think the example of 'Nellie Dean' the housekeeper in 'Wuthering Heights' is possibly the clearest example. Her viewpoint may also, of course be clouded and so is a source for essays. (I've suffered from them!)
P.G. Wodehouse's 'The Oldest Member' is a very clear example in the humour dept..He holds a whole series of short stories together. Very clever.
I think the example of 'Nellie Dean' the housekeeper in 'Wuthering Heights' is possibly the clearest example. Her viewpoint may also, of course be clouded and so is a source for essays. (I've suffered from them!)
P.G. Wodehouse's 'The Oldest Member' is a very clear example in the humour dept..He holds a whole series of short stories together. Very clever.
jourdain; I just wrote a long response to your post, but now it's disappeared! I think "The Oldest Member" was probably the model for my OP. I'm not keen on multiple first-person narrators: I get confused and don't know what's going on. Also, a single narrator makes me believe the story; omniscient or multiple narrators tells me it's just made up by an author.
"If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you'll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don't feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth."
afghans in '79 - is early ( or young) watson in Sherlock HOlmes innit? some years since I read him
and ayth - if you are still with me - many Abers tire early -
blue death
outlining text in blue and then deleting
control-z will go back, so do that twice and it should be OK
'reverses immediate previous action'
if ever you wish to go forward it is control-y
and ayth - if you are still with me - many Abers tire early -
blue death
outlining text in blue and then deleting
control-z will go back, so do that twice and it should be OK
'reverses immediate previous action'
if ever you wish to go forward it is control-y
I'd forgotten that one. Yes, it's amazing. One sentence and your brain is trying to cope with all the images and contradictions and make sense of them - which it can't - so you can't not read on to find out how they fit together. T.B.H. I didn't get all through it - lots of other things to read - but I think I'll have another go..... when I've read the waiting pile! :(
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