Steven Donahue's Blog: Books and Stuff - Posts Tagged "joyce"
Five Short Stories Everyone Should Read
There have been many great short stories written by many great writers. Below is a list of five of those stories, all of which deserve everyone's attention.
5. A Scandal in Bohemia by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
The brilliant Sherlock Holmes comes to the aid of a king who tries to avoid a royal disgrace, but Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s sleuth meets his match: a woman who may be just as clever as the World’s Greatest Detective.
4. Gift of the Magi by O’Henry.
A couple’s love is illustrated by the sacrifices they make for each other in this O’Henry ballad.
3. The Tell-tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe.
A murderer’s conscience gets the best of him in Poe’s creepy classic about a man who kills a rival and then buries him under the floorboards of his apartment.
2. The Dead by James Joyce.
Joyce’s introspective story about Dubliners at a holiday party, including a popular man who discovers that his idyllic life is not as perfect as it seems.
1. A Clean, Well-Lighted Place by Ernest Hemingway.
This straight-forward tale of two waiters closing up a café shows Hemingway’s greatest strength: capturing the dignity of the human spirit.
5. A Scandal in Bohemia by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
The brilliant Sherlock Holmes comes to the aid of a king who tries to avoid a royal disgrace, but Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s sleuth meets his match: a woman who may be just as clever as the World’s Greatest Detective.
4. Gift of the Magi by O’Henry.
A couple’s love is illustrated by the sacrifices they make for each other in this O’Henry ballad.
3. The Tell-tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe.
A murderer’s conscience gets the best of him in Poe’s creepy classic about a man who kills a rival and then buries him under the floorboards of his apartment.
2. The Dead by James Joyce.
Joyce’s introspective story about Dubliners at a holiday party, including a popular man who discovers that his idyllic life is not as perfect as it seems.
1. A Clean, Well-Lighted Place by Ernest Hemingway.
This straight-forward tale of two waiters closing up a café shows Hemingway’s greatest strength: capturing the dignity of the human spirit.
Published on November 20, 2013 16:33
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Tags:
doyle, hemmingway, joyce, poe
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