Cited: Atwood, Margaret. “Happy Endings.” The Longman Anthology of Short Fiction. New York: Longman, 2001. 90-92.…
There is a show named, Crime Scene Investigations. It is about forensics investigators that solve crimes. They catch Las Vegas’s criminals. In the “Ending Happy” episode, the forensics investigators are investigating Lorenzo Morales’s death. His nickname was “Happy.” They want to know who caused his death and how it occurred. Dreama and Connor should be held accountable for Lorenzo Morales’s murder due to the actions they have committed. These two individuals injured him the most out of everyone who was involved. George and Dorris should not be charged with Mr. Morales’s murder because they only caused Mr. Morales to have an allergic reaction. This is not even comparable to the crime Dreama and Connor committed upon Happy.…
For centuries, society has shaped these abstract ideas of what happiness means and how one could achieve happiness in their lives. However, in order to even understand what actions could lead to one’s happiness, one must be able to understand the definition of happiness itself. Having read Charles Dicken’s book Great Expectations, happiness persists as a pleasure or sense of a meaningful and rich psychosocial integration in a person’s understanding of himself or herself.…
“Wit,” by Margaret Edson, and “Atonement,” by Ian McEwan, both consist of happy endings in a deep and meaningful way. The outcome of these novels may not be perfect endings ripped straight out of a Disney Movie; however, they are happy due to the characters being able to undergo “some kind of spiritual reassessment or moral reconciliation, even with the self, even at death” (Weldon). In “Wit,” Vivian’s ability to reevaluate herself and morally accept the decisions she has made throughout her life, creates a positive outcome for the novel.…
What happiness means to me is something you find pleasurable or comfortable with. There are many kinds of happiness i can find in our society. There is physical happiness, where we fell the joy of being fit, strong or healthy. There is also intellectual happiness, where the pleasure come from you understanding something. Either way happiness is happiness, and it could be found in the novel, "Fahrenheit 451" written by Ray Bradbury. One example of happiness is at the beginning of the novel where Guy Montag is burning books, "While the books went up in sparkling whirls and blew away on a wind turned dark with burning. Montag grinned the fierce grin of all men singed and driven back back by flame"(4.) Already at the beginning of the book, it shows Guy Montag burning book.…
Without happiness, sadness cannot exist. In today’s society, happiness and sadness coexist and form an unbreakable bond. In Ray Bradbury's book, Fahrenheit 451, that bond does not exist. In this book, the main character, Guy Montag, desperately wants to be happy; but society tells him to stay neutral. Montag understands that he never genuinely happily married his wife when he meets a clever girl named Clarisse McClellan. Montag breaks free of society’s expectations with the help of Clarisse, by learning about the past, and through his own, more literal, battles to finally achieve true happiness.…
whom she called John and Mary. The story itself is very different from most of other…
When eavesdropping on a person’s conversation who is nearby, sometimes a person won’t get all the information on what they are talking about or find out how their conversation ended. Sometimes a person could infer the wrong things or not get the whole story. Also, since the people talking in the conversation might not tell the full story, the person listening might not get to know how the end of their conversation went, but if they are lucky, they might. The narrator in the short story “Hills Like White Elephants”, by Ernest Hemingway, was not so lucky and didn’t find out the ending, or many details of what the couple was disgusting. The story just ended with the woman saying “There’s nothing wrong with me. I’m fine”…
The ending of a novel can be evaluated by the reader in several different ways, however to properly analyze the work is to further explore the logic of how everything has come to be. The ability of the author to show the reader that the ending is reasonable from the preceding action and the character’s nature is what should truly be examined. Not only is the ending of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz both happy and unhappy, it is logical in the sense that it follows logically from the climax of the novel all while the character’s have been constant throughout, except Oscar. Oscar, the protagonist experiences a life-changing transformation that leads to his untimely death. However, the ending is convincing because of this transformation and it is convincing that the novel would end the way it would. Diaz wrote this novel in a way that kept the reader captivated and interested because his logic can not be questioned.…
There are many perspectives and definitions on art, an abstract topic. In the world of books, nothing is considered art unless the novel can engage the readers through the author's use of emotions and stylistic syntax. Using Groen's essay “Books Still Win” tragic realism is seen in Joshua Ferris' novel “Then We Came to the End.” Tragic realism is evident in Ferris' novel through the fact there is both good and bad within a person, that life improves with struggles and that sadness is always evident.…
Plot deals with where a story begins, and how it ends. Some of the twists and turns that occur might be part of it, but the basics of plot are according to Atwood in “Happy Endings” two people meet, a bunch of stuff happens and they die. The point Atwood is making is that plot, no matter how a writer contrives it, is in consequential; because, all endings are the same. Plot is nothing more than a what, and a what, and a what.…
What is happily ever after anyways? Did the characters never experience sadness again, just pure bliss, joy and happiness? We’re told everyone lived happily ever after, but did they all? By definition what was this happiness and what classifies it as…
Growing up, children become fascinated with the ideas they encounter all around them. Stories they have read in books, fairy tales they have seen on television; its inevitable for children to create this so called idea of “happily ever after” in their minds, because that is all they have been accustomed too. “Cinderella,” being a perfect example, has created this facet of stumbling upon prince charming and living happily ever after. In Anne Sexton’s “Cinderella,” the speaker uses a nonchalant tone, graphic imagery, and repetitive similes to critique the cultural misconception of what happiness truly means.…
“I have discovered in life that there are ways of getting almost anywhere you want to go, if you really want to go” (Hughes). In the texts Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck and The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, the main characters both have dreams for the future. The difference is what drives each character toward the dream. We learn from these stories that dreams can both positivelypositively and negatively affect people’s lives and relationships, depending on the motivation to pursue them.…
The conflict in a character’s life is what makes a narrative worth reading. Margaret Atwood’s “Happy Endings” proves this by setting up four plots with similar conflicts and characters that contrast with the beginning story, the life of a content couple who face no difficulties or excitements in life. The combination of structure, characters, and conflict create an overall unity in the divided work to prove the importance of tragedy, mania, loss, and growth. If Holden Caulfield applied himself in school and had a perfect family and social life, The Catcher in the Rye would be much less successful.…