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    John Cheever - Reunion

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    Analysis: ”Reunion” by John Cheever We all know the feeling and the thoughts‚ which come to our mind‚ when meeting someone for the first time after several years. “Does she look the same? Will there be any awkward silences or feelings? I wonder how much he has changed” Your stomach might turn upside down right before the meeting‚ too. “Reunion” from 1962 by John Cheever‚ is a short story told through the eyes of a young boy. Most children‚ who meet their parents after a long period‚ would be overwhelmed

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    It is better to know and be disappointed‚ than to not know and always wonder Ord: 880 The meeting with a person you’ve missed can be just as joyful‚ as it can be sad. We experience just that in the short story “Reunion” by John Cheever. Charlie is transferring trains in New York and got a 90-minuts window to eat lunch with his father‚ who he has not seen in 3 years since his parents‚ is divorced. The father seems as a stranger‚ but Charlie hopes to reconnect with him. They go to several

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    John Cheever "Reunion

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    all the information to us as they see it and they tell the story how they want it to be heard. Although they are telling the story from their point of view‚ it is our job as readers to interpret‚ that what they are telling us is fair an just. Some narrator’s often won’t tell the whole story‚ but just what they want you to hear. In John Cheever’s‚ Reunion the narrator‚ Charlie is a narrator that cannot be trusted. He is very critical and unfair to his father and wants the reader to think that his

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    John Cheever Reunion

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    Reunion The settings in John Cheever’s short story Reunion is a necessary key to the reader’s understanding of dynamic between the characters. Based in the settings of the Grand Central Train station and four different restaurants the reader can make clear assumptions when analyzing the characters’ behavior in these environments. Cheever’s short story demonstrates how elements such as‚ humor‚ pathos‚ and the grotesque work together to tell a compelling tell of a father and son. The story begins

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    specific to the story. Successful authors are able to blend grotesque‚ pathos‚ and humor so that the story is cohesive as well as responsive. In the short story “Reunion” by John Cheever‚ these elements are used to construct a story about a young boy and the relationship between him and his distant father. Although the story is short‚ Cheever incorporates humor‚ pathos‚ and grotesque into the dialogue and narration in order to uncover the reader’s emotions of frustration‚ pity‚ and comicality towards

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    Cheever

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    Cleveland Tubbs ENG 102 8 June 2010 John Cheever Author Kathryn Riley’s article‚ “John Cheever and the Limitations of Fantasy‚” is an assessment made by six commentators on the works of John Cheever. The commentators conclude that a visionary quality is one of the central features of the work of Cheever. Samuel Coale is the first commentator that attempts to prove his argument by stating that Cheever’s darker tales store up strange visionary thoughts over unenlightened minds. The next commentator

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    reunion

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    Reunion The story under discussion vividly represents Cheever’s typical features as a sharp observer of life‚ a subtle psychologist with a great gift of penetrating into the minds of his characters at crucial moments of their lives‚ a skilful writer. It represents the narrator’s recollection of an episode of his teenage life which reflects the complexity of `fathers-sons’ relations. Cheever writes in his own brief seemingly casual manner‚ but the verbal plane is only the top of the iceberg. The

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    Point of View

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    Point Of View December 4‚ 2011 E block The three points of view are first person‚ third person limited‚ and third person omniscient. First person is when the narrator is a character in the story. Third limited is telling from one characters perspective‚ and omniscient is an all seeing‚ all knowing narrator. Situational irony is defined as a contradiction between what is expected to happen and what actually happens. Narrator point of view creates situational irony

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    Point of View

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    there are two kinds of points of view: the first-person point of view‚ and the third-person point of view. In the first-person point of view a fictitious observer tells us what he or she saw‚ heard‚ concluded‚ and thought and is usually characterized by the use of the pronoun “I”. The speaker or narrator may sometimes seem to be the author speaking directly using an authorial voice. For example‚ Nick Carraway in “The Great Gatsby” tells the story in a first-person point of view‚ sharing with the reader

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    Point of View

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    the high waves that are menacing their existence (paragraph 9). At about paragraph 49‚ however‚ the speaker shifts his concentration primarily to the correspondent‚ while he describes the other men more dramatically. Might we assume that at this point‚ Crane is merging the speaker of the story with his own voice‚ as nearly as we can determine it? Throughout‚ the speaker introduces some of his own ideas‚ and also‚ at times‚ speaks ironically. This accounts for some of the more humorous expressions

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