“The Chase” Annie Dillard wrote a short story called, “The Chase”. The story is about a little girl who plays like the boys. This young girl can easily hold her own against her young neighbor boy friends, and does. On a cold winter day as the children are throwing snowballs at cars for fun, they happen to hit a Buick, cracking the window. This then leads to an exhilarating chase between the children and a middle aged man. The story is read in many different ways, to me however, I see it as though…
In Annie Dillard’s autobiography “The Chase”, she emphasizes and uses great detail in her different writing techniques to make the scenes in the story feel more alive or realistic. The attention of detail can be seen with her intense use of transitions and active descriptions in the actual chase scene. Dillard also uses tone and language of the characters to make the story feel more like actual real time events. In the first paragraph of “The Chase”, the narrator of the story a seven year old girl…
narrative, Annie Dillard illustrates the exhilaration gained from the pursuit of glory. The chase begins after kids in a neighborhood hit the windshield of a car with a snowball. The man inside the vehicle opens the door and proceeds to chase them. The breathlessness of the glory comes from the man chasing them through the neighborhood. Dillard’s use of compelling writing techniques emphasizes the way concrete detail, repetition, and parallelism contributes to the breathlessness of the chase. Annie Dillard…
In “The Chase” by Annie Dillard, the actual chase sequence is only six paragraphs long, a relatively short selection. But when read by the reader the passage seems to be much longer than only six paragraphs. This effect is made possible through Dillard’s excellent use of description, details, transitions, repetition, sentence variety, parallelism, point of view, and tension. “He ran after us, and we ran away from him, up the snowy Reynolds sidewalk. At the corner, I looked back; incredibly, he…
Reaction to the “Chase” by Annie Dillard The story is about children getting into trouble. I am impressed how children were thinking like adults and what their choices were to survive the situation. The children evidently liked the idea of throwing snowballs at cars which would any normal kids do. In the story they incessantly were running away from the adult and got caught. But the thing is that when I was a kid, I with my friend were throwing balloons filled with water at cars but we…
In Annie Dillard’s “The Chase” she begins the short story by explaining how she was involved in the sports activities in the neighborhood. The audience understand that Annie feels like there is nothing more exciting than playing boys sports. We see that she is the only girl that plays with the boys. Then we are given a detailed memory of how one snowy day doing the usual snow day and her friends throwing snowballs at passing cars. However, one little mistake the author made, was throwing a snowball…
Q2. In her narrative essay Annie Dillard used two rapid transitions in paragraph2: first she described how the boys taught her as a girl to play football with. She learned the tactics to use when you play football; for example, “Best, you got throw yourself mightily at someone’s running legs. Either you brought him down or you hit the ground flat on your chin, with your arms empty before you.” And next she disturbed during winter instead of playing outside with the ball, they were playing by throwing…
“The Chase,” Annie Dillard describes an exciting encounter that brought her great delight in which she will hardly experience again. She uses a series of figurative languages and selection of details to incorporate her tone into the story and portray the passions of but not limited to children. The story starts off with descriptions of the game football and proceeds to her encounter with a stranger while playing with her friends. As a result of throwing snowballs at his car window, the man got out…
opponent to Dillard. This is because as she was running, she compared his strategy of chasing them to how children played football: flinging yourself wholeheartedly into what you are about to do. Also, with her description of the chase as adrenaline rush, it further implies that she enjoyed the chase and respected the man for attempting to run after her and her friend. She respects him because he never gave up during the Chase; any other adult would have given up after a bit. 4. Dillard describes…
AP English 11 Vanessa Walker March 13, 2015 The Chase Annie Dillard, the author of “The Chase,” wrote about a memory from her childhood. In this story, she expresses the chase between an angry man, her friends, and herself. She describes how it was that chase which gave her such a thrill that would prove to be the most exciting and memorable point in her life. It was the ways in which she organized her sentences and incorporated certain literary devices that she would come to create a specific…