Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Global Tales - Stories From Many Cultures :: essays research papers
Comp are and contrast the two stories by R.K. Narayan. Which story do you prefer and why?In all the stories and authors featured in " world-wide Tales", R.K. Narayan is the most respected and well-known author. From the short description of him at the curiosity of the book, he created a space for himself called "Malgudi" and developed his own characters, like a puppet master making his own puppets from cloth and giving them liveness when he does the show. His stories are universal, probably because the themes and characters of the stories are easy to identify with. He should be ninety-seven this year (year 2000). From what I know, his other books include " Malgudi eld", where " An astrologers Day" is taken from. Narayan is a very law-abiding man, sharp and sarcastic at the same time. His sarcasm become witticism and it is non very obvious sometimes. We have to read between the lines to slang the joke. He is very descriptive in his writing and his world comes active with the mood through the informative and colourful description, the characteristics and the internal thinkings of the characters, the suspense and the dialogues used. I especially admire the way he brings the story to a close, not too dramatic, that satisfactory. Some writers often leave an unfinished finishing where it is up to the reader to decide, treating this as their style and adding a sense of conundrum to the story. However, these are sometimes the most horrible kind of ending, not just irritating, but also annoying. The ending is the element that wraps up the whole story, yet the writer left it out, like a jigsaw piece went missing. It is not a complete piece of writing. Lastly, I find R.K. Narayan to be high at times, from the way he phrased his sentence, and the sarcasm, but we like it. In " An Astrologers Day", an astrologer meets a stranger and tells his fortune. Surprisingly, the "fake" astrologer managed to tell what was tr ue for the stranger. Then, it is only when the astrologer reveals his secret, did we know how his "magic" worked. We are brought into the world of the streets of India where there is little vigilanting but "a bewildering cris-cross of light rays and moving shadows". The in-depth description gives us the setting, which can be seen in our minds. non
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