Challenge 1007
Hoods Dark and Deep
In Charles C. Cole’s Joe Avery Goes for a Ride:
- What action in the opening of the story might tell a veteran reader that the conclusion is unlikely to be as optimistic as in other chapters?
- In what way is the chapter necessary for building the character of Joe Avery?
- In what way is Joe Avery a 21st-century character rather than one that, say, Achim von Arnim would have recognized?
In Gary Inbinder’s Los Angeles:
- Why does the narrative logic justify making it difficult for Max Niemand to locate and find Roxy Blaine?
- In what ways might Roxy’s offer to participate in “business” with Max be more attractive than Eve’s or John Merwin’s?
In Achim von Arnim’s Madame de Saverne:
- Why might the author have chosen Louis XVI as the idol for Madame de Saverne’s “cult of personality” rather than Napoleon or some other European monarch?
- How might the story have been read in the 19th century to depict the action in the various scenes? Literature was often read aloud in homes to interested audiences.
- Is the story a tragedy or a comedy?
In Rosalind Goldsmith’s Walking the Hood: Are the characters in the neighbourhood entirely implausible? Might some or even all have appeared in newspaper reports at some time?
In Stephen Tillman’s Dust Pile:
- Why is it better that the title appear in the singular, “Dust Pile,” rather than the plural, “Dust Piles”?
- How does the author expand or reinforce the traditional characteristics of vampires?