1) How
did Billy Collins compare a good poem to the eye chart, and how is this applicable
to other forms of storytelling?
2) As
discussed in class, what is at least one risk and one benefit of using second
person in a story (example: “How to Become a Writer” by Lorrie Moore, “The Gun”
by Stephen Dobyns, “WQED, Channel 13:
Programming Guide” by Ann Claycomb)?
3) How
does Annie Dillard demonstrate an awareness of and offer a response to
potential critics of her philosophy in “Living Like Weasels”?
4) What
is at least one potential risk and one potential benefit of using profanity in
literature (example: “You Can’t Kill the Rooster” by David Sedaris)?
5) How
does Sherman Alexie avoid sounding too heroic in “Somebody Else’s Genocide” and
why is that important?
6) Describe
the storytelling aesthetic of Kurt Vonnegut (examples: “Blood of Dresden” and “Harrison
Bergeron”).
7) Describe
the storytelling aesthetic of Tom Wolfe (excerpt from “The Right Stuff”).
8) Describe
the storytelling aesthetic of Annie Dillard (“Living Like Weasels”).
9) Which
two short stories that we have read so far involve fatal head wounds?
10) In “French
Lessons” by David Sedaris (which we listened to in class), what is the problem
that the students in the French class are having?
11) Similar
to “You Can’t Kill the Rooster,” what is one risk that Sedaris takes in “French
Lessons”?
12) In “Excerpt
from A Walk in the Woods,” what strategy does Bill Bryson employ in order to
simultaneously build tension and humor?
13) Describe
the internal versus the external conflict of “Bullet in the Brain” by Tobias
Wolff.
14) What
pieces that we’ve read so far contain these lines? (If you want to skip any of these, each counts as a separate question.)
a.
Under
every bush is a muskrat hole or a beer can…. Our look was as if two lovers, or deadly enemies, met unexpectedly…, I
missed my chance. I should have gone for the throat.
b.
"Interesting,"
smiles your date, and then he looks down at his arm hairs and starts to smooth
them, all, always, in the same direction.
c.
“Bitch,
you need to have them ugly-ass bunions shaved down is what you need to do. But
you can't do shit about it tonight, so lighten up, motherfucker."
d.
Your
son wants to know if that man is a real painter. You tell him yes, but
not a good one. He looks back at the t. v., asks why not. The
spaghetti water boils over, hissing, on the stove.
e.
Once a
skunk had come plodding through our camp and it had sounded like a stegosaurus.
There was another heavy rustle and then the sound of lapping at the spring. It
was having a drink, whatever it was.
15) What
is flash fiction?
16) According
to Stephen King, what are the two basic types of storytellers and what are
their similarities and differences?
17) What
is a Point of View Violation and why is it dangerous in writing?
18) There
are three different types of Point of View (or five, depending on how you break
them up). Describe at least two of them.
19) What
is a Zen Koan and how is that related to “A Perfect Day for Bananafish,” “Cathedral,”
or the Billy Collins metaphor of the eye chart?
20) What
Point of View (1st, 2nd, or 3rd) is employed
in Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral”?
21) What
is the significance of the title, “Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes,” and how is
this related to Arthur’s and Joanie’s relationship?
22) In “Cathedral,”
describe the change in the husband’s character by the end of the story.
23) Describe
at least one significant change from the text, as seen in the short film
adaptation of “Harrison Bergeron.”
24) Describe
at least one significant change from the text, as seen in the short film
adaptation of “Bullet in the Brain.”
25) Why
does David Sedaris’s brother call himself “The Rooster”?
26) What
is one significant similarity between Arthur in “Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes”
and the narrator of “A Man Gets Tired”?
27) What
are two benefits of using dialog gestures in storytelling?
28) What
is one risk associated with the use of dialog gestures in storytelling?
29) Especially
when it comes to fiction, where can we look for inspiration?
30) Aside
from building tension, why is foreshadowing absolutely essential in
storytelling?
31) Describe an instance of foreshadowing from at
least one piece that we have read so far.
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