Why Is This Good? episode 076: "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" by J. D. Salinger

If you enjoyed this episode, consider joining our Patreon. Your support helps us keep the show running. Find out more at / whyisthisgoodpodcast
For daily writing tips, industry news, and great short fiction, join our Facebook group at / napleswritersworkshop
You can also subscribe to our monthly newsletter at www.napleswritersworkshop.com
In this episode, we discuss "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" by J. D. Salinger. How can a simple presentation provide such a complex story? What's the effect of a third-person, psychically distant point of view? How do we know what a character is thinking if we never see their thoughts? What should we as writers provide for readers to see the bigger picture?
Read the story here: foresthillshs.enschool.org/ou...
Why Is This Good? is a podcast from the Naples Writers' Workshop in which we read successful stories and ask "Why is this good?"
Through our discussion, we hope to discover useful things to say about how fiction works, the craft of writing, and literary art. We try to find lessons for our own writing by closely examining well-written stories, and we hope to share some of those lessons with our audience.
Why is This Good? is produced in Naples, Florida by the Naples Writers' Workshop.
Links:
www.napleswritersworkshop.com
www.whyisthisgood.com

Пікірлер: 2

  • @robertsantana3261
    @robertsantana32618 ай бұрын

    U guys rock. Why wasn’t Symour kissing that girl on the leg on the beach brought up.

  • @bmaei5
    @bmaei52 жыл бұрын

    I love this short story. Remember Gordon lish eliminated all the extraneous material from carvers’s short stories. And no you do not need to lead the reader anywhere. The reader can interpret the story as she sees fit.