These two variation are vastly analogous. Because they are variations of each other the plots are obviously very similar. They both tell of an up and coming author struggling to keep body and soul together when he meets a lady who he thinks is his big break . Saddened to find that the lady chooses the most expensive restaurant in town to meet up he goes to the bank to withdrawal his savings. In both stories when he arrives at the restaurant he recalls the lady being older than he thought, but that she still hadn't lost her beauty. When they begin lunch she reassures him that she only eats one thing, but after saying that five times she's gone through her body weight in food. Our narrator, trying to allow himself to be able to pay the check looks for the cheapest thing on the menu. In the end he is barely able to pay the tab and is forced to look like a jerk by only leaving little of what is a tip. The end is basically the only major twist but I'll get to that in the next paragraph.
Although these variations of "The Luncheon" are very much alike they don't call them variations for antyhing. There are many things that are different like the setting, resolution, and a plethora of minute details that make each story unique. First of all in Maugham's story the narrator is housed in a small apartment in Paris. In Archer's version the story takes place in London. Respectively when our narrator goes to the bank in the first story he draws out francs, and when he is in London he receives pounds. Now moving on to