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The Short Story 
Elements & 
Plot Structure
The Short Story 
Definition 
• A short story is a form of short fictional narrative prose, tending to 
be more concise than longer works of fiction. The term most often 
refers to a work of fiction no longer than 20,000 words and no shorter 
than 1,000. 
•Short stories tend to be less complex than novels, focusing on only 
one incident, with a single plot, a single setting, a limited number of 
characters, and covering a short period of time. 
•Short stories have their origins in narrative storytelling and prose 
anecdote, a swiftly-sketched situation that comes rapidly to its point. 
•Of course, as with any art form, the exact characteristics of a short 
story will vary by author.
The Short Story 
Origins 
Short stories date back to the story-telling traditions which produced such notable tales as 
Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. Short sections of these tales focused on individual narratives that 
could be told at one sitting. The overall arch of the story would only emerge through the telling of 
multiple sections of the tale. 
Fables, which tend to be folk tales with an explicitly expressed moral, were said by the Greek 
historian Herodotus to have been invented by a Greek slave named Aesop in the 6th century 
BCE (although other times and nationalities are also given for Aesop). These ancient fables are 
known today as Aesop's Fables. 
The other ancient form of short story, anecdotes, were popular during the years of the Roman 
Empire. Anecdotes functioned as a sort of parable, a brief realistic narration that embodies a 
point. Many of the surviving Roman anecdotes were later collected in the Gesta Romanorum in 
the 13th or 14th century. Anecdotes remained popular in Europe well into the 18th century, when 
the fictional anecdotal letters of Sir Roger de Coverley were published.
The Short Story 
Origins 
In Europe, the oral story-telling tradition began to develop into written stories in the early 14th 
century, most notably with Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Giovanni Boccaccio's 
Decameron. Both of these books are composed of individual short stories (which range from 
farce or humorous anecdotes to well-crafted literary fictions) set within a larger narrative story (a 
frame story), although the frame tale device was not adopted by all writers. At the end of the 
16th century, some of the most popular short stories in Europe were the darkly tragic "novella" 
of Matteo Bandello (especially in their French translation). During the Renaissance, the term 
novella was used when referring to short stories. 
The mid 17th century in France saw the development of a refined short novel, the "nouvelle", by 
such authors as Madame de Lafayette. In the 1690s, traditional fairy tales began to be 
published (one of the most famous collections was by Charles Perrault). The appearance of 
Antoine Galland's first modern translation of the Thousand and One Nights (or Arabian Nights 
from 1704; another translation appeared in 1710–12) would have an enormous influence on the 
18th century European short stories of Voltaire, Diderot and others.
Elements 
Model 
Obviously, subject matter for 
short stories over the years has 
varied wildly, ranging from the 
mundane to the fantastic. 
Today, we will look at a familiar 
story, “Little Red Riding Hood,” 
to analyze it for elements of the 
short story.
Elements 
Setting 
Setting is the time and place of a 
story’s action, and includes ideas, 
customs, values, and beliefs. 
“Little Red Riding Hood” takes 
place in the woods a long time ago.
Elements 
Characters 
Characters are the actors in a 
story’s plot. They can be people, 
animals, ghosts, mythological 
creatures, or anything else within 
the author’s imagination. 
The PROTAGONIST is the main 
character. The ANTAGONIST is in 
conflict with the main character. 
Not all stories have protagonists. 
The characters in the story are 
Little Red Riding Hood, the Big 
Bad Wolf, the Grandmother, and 
the woodsman. Little Red Riding 
Hood is the protagonist. The Big 
Bad Wolf is the antagonist.
Elements 
Point of View 
Point of view refers to the relationship 
of the NARRATOR, or storyteller, of the 
story. In FIRST-PERSON point of 
view, the narrator is a character, and is 
referred to using personal pronouns, 
including, “I.” In THIRD-PERSON 
point of view, the narrator reveals 
thoughts of only one character, 
referring to that character using 
pronouns like, “he” or “she.” In 
THIRD-PERSON OMNISCIENT point 
of view, the narrator knows everything 
about the story’s events and reveals 
the thoughts of all the story’s 
characters. 
“Little Red Riding Hood” is traditionally 
told from the THIRD-PERSON 
OMNISCIENT point of view: the 
narrator explains what Little Red Riding 
Hood is doing as well as what is 
happening to her and her grandmother.
Elements 
Theme 
Theme is the central idea or message 
of a story, often a perception about life 
or human nature. STATED themes are 
directly presented in a story. IMPLIED 
themes must be inferred by 
considering all the elements of a story 
and asking what message about life is 
conveyed. 
The theme of “Little Red Riding Hood” 
is IMPLIED. While the narrator does 
not directly state a message, the 
reader can infer it: be suspicious of 
things and people that do not appear 
the way they should.
Elements 
Plot 
Plot is the sequence of events in a 
story. Each event causes or leads to 
the next. Plot is often created through 
CONFLICT, a struggle between 
opposing forces. An EXTERNAL 
conflict is one between a character and 
an outside force, such as another 
character, nature, society, fate, etc. An 
INTERNAL conflict takes place within 
the mind of a character who is torn 
between opposing feelings or different 
courses of action. 
In “Little Red Riding Hood,” the conflict 
is EXTERNAL—Little Red Riding Hood 
versus The Big Bad Wolf.
Short Story Triangle 
Most plots develop in five stages, and can be 
expressed in the form of a triangle. 
The chart, first developed in 1863 by Gustav 
Freytag and consequently also known as 
“Freytag’s Triangle,” is a diagram of plot structure 
which shows complication and emotional tension 
rising like one side of a pyramid toward its apex, 
which represents the climax of action. 
Once the climax is over, the descending side of the pyramid depicts the 
decrease in tension and complication as the work reaches its conclusion 
and denouement. 
Freytag designed the chart for discussing tragedy, but it can be applied to 
many kinds of fiction.
Short Story Triangle 
Most plots develop 
in five stages: 
1. EXPOSITION 
introduces the story’s 
characters, setting, 
and conflict. 
Exposition
Short Story Triangle 
Most plots develop 
in five stages: 
2. RISING ACTION 
occurs as complications, 
twists, or intensifications 
of the conflict occur 
Exposition Rising Action
Short Story Triangle 
Most plots develop 
in five stages: 
Exposition Rising Action 
Climax 
3. CLIMAX 
is the emotional high 
point of the story.
Short Story Triangle 
Most plots develop 
in five stages: 
Exposition Rising Action 
Climax 
Falling Action 
4. FALLING ACTION 
is the logical result of 
the climax.
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Falling Action 
Most plots develop 
in five stages: 
5. RESOLUTION 
presents the final 
outcome of the story. 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Falling Action 
Model: “Little Red 
Riding Hood” 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Falling Action 
Model: “Little Red 
Riding Hood” 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
The Big Bad Wolf 
spots Little Red 
walking in the 
woods and asks her 
where she’s going 
with the basket of 
treats. 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Falling Action 
Model: “Little Red 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
The Big Bad Wolf 
spots Little Red 
walking in the 
woods and asks her 
where she’s going 
with the basket of 
treats. 
The Wolf runs to 
the grandmother’s 
house , eats her, 
puts on her bonnet, 
glasses, and night 
gown, and climbs 
into her bed. 
Riding Hood” 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Falling Action 
Model: “Little Red 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
The Big Bad Wolf 
spots Little Red 
walking in the 
woods and asks her 
where she’s going 
with the basket of 
treats. 
Little Red arrives at 
her grandmother’s 
house and sits on a 
stool at the 
disguised wolf’s 
bedside. 
The Wolf runs to 
the grandmother’s 
house , eats her, 
puts on her bonnet, 
glasses, and night 
gown, and climbs 
into her bed. 
Riding Hood” 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Falling Action 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
The Big Bad Wolf 
spots Little Red 
walking in the 
woods and asks her 
where she’s going 
with the basket of 
treats. 
Little Red arrives at 
her grandmother’s 
house and sits on a 
stool at the 
disguised wolf’s 
bedside. 
The Wolf runs to 
the grandmother’s 
house , eats her, 
puts on her bonnet, 
glasses, and night 
gown, and climbs 
into her bed. 
Little Red 
questions all the 
things that appear 
different about her 
“grandmother.” 
Model: “Little Red 
Riding Hood” 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Little Red comments on the Wolf’s 
nose, eyes, ears, and teeth, and he 
responds by eating her in one gulp. 
Falling Action 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
The Big Bad Wolf 
spots Little Red 
walking in the 
woods and asks her 
where she’s going 
with the basket of 
treats. 
Little Red arrives at 
her grandmother’s 
house and sits on a 
stool at the 
disguised wolf’s 
bedside. 
The Wolf runs to 
the grandmother’s 
house , eats her, 
puts on her bonnet, 
glasses, and night 
gown, and climbs 
into her bed. 
Little Red 
questions all the 
things that appear 
different about her 
“grandmother.” 
Model: “Little Red 
Riding Hood” 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Little Red comments on the Wolf’s 
nose, eyes, ears, and teeth, and he 
responds by eating her in one gulp. 
Falling Action 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
The Big Bad Wolf 
spots Little Red 
walking in the 
woods and asks her 
where she’s going 
with the basket of 
treats. 
Little Red arrives at 
her grandmother’s 
house and sits on a 
stool at the 
disguised wolf’s 
bedside. 
The Wolf runs to 
the grandmother’s 
house , eats her, 
puts on her bonnet, 
glasses, and night 
gown, and climbs 
into her bed. 
Little Red 
questions all the 
things that appear 
different about her 
“grandmother.” 
The Woodsman 
arrives on the 
scene to discover 
the wolf dressed as 
the grandmother, 
and quickly 
surmises what has 
transpired in the 
woman’s cottage. 
Model: “Little Red 
Riding Hood” 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Short Story Triangle 
Climax 
Little Red comments on the Wolf’s 
nose, eyes, ears, and teeth, and he 
responds by eating her in one gulp. 
Falling Action 
Model: “Little Red 
Riding Hood” 
Little Red Riding Hood 
has prepared a basket 
of goodies for her 
grandmother. She 
begins walking 
through dangerous 
woods to deliver the 
basket. 
The Big Bad Wolf 
spots Little Red 
walking in the 
woods and asks her 
where she’s going 
with the basket of 
treats. 
Little Red arrives at 
her grandmother’s 
house and sits on a 
stool at the 
disguised wolf’s 
bedside. 
The Wolf runs to 
the grandmother’s 
house , eats her, 
puts on her bonnet, 
glasses, and night 
gown, and climbs 
into her bed. 
Little Red 
questions all the 
things that appear 
different about her 
“grandmother.” 
The Woodsman 
arrives on the 
scene to discover 
the wolf dressed as 
the grandmother, 
and quickly 
surmises what has 
transpired in the 
woman’s cottage. 
The Woodsman kills the 
wolf and out step the 
Grandmother and Little 
Red, happy and safe. 
Exposition Rising Action Resolution
Active Reading Strategies 
The Short Story 
Make educated guesses about what will 
happen next by combining clues in the story 
with what you already know. Predicting 
helps you anticipate events and stay alert to 
the less obvious parts of a story. 
PREDICT 
Say to yourself… 
• I think the title might mean… 
• I think this character is going to… 
• Now I think he or she will… 
• My first prediction doesn’t match what I read. Now I 
think…
Active Reading Strategies 
The Short Story 
Draw parallels between people, places, and 
events in the story and the people, places, 
and events in your life. 
CONNECT 
Ask yourself… 
• How would the main character act in my situation? 
• How would I act in the main character’s situation? 
• When have I felt the same way as the character? 
• What parts of my life does this remind me of? 
• What other stories does this remind me of?
Active Reading Strategies 
The Short Story 
Ask yourself questions to help you clarify 
QUESTION the story as you go along. 
Ask yourself… 
• Do I understand what I’ve read so far? 
• Why did the character say that? 
• What’s going on here? 
• What does this mean?
Active Reading Strategies 
The Short Story 
In your mind, form pictures of what is 
happening in the story. Pay attention to the 
details the writer gives you, and make them 
a part of your reading experience. 
VISUALIZE 
Ask yourself… 
• How does this scene, character, or object look? 
• Who is in this scene? 
• Where are the characters in relation to one another and to 
their surroundings?
Active Reading Strategies 
The Short Story 
Form opinions and make judgments about 
the story while you are reading—not just 
after you have finished. 
EVALUATE 
Ask yourself… 
• Does this turn of events make sense? 
• Is this character believable? 
• What is particularly effective about this writer’s style? 
• Do I agree with this idea?
Active Reading Strategies 
The Short Story 
Pause every page or two to think about 
your reading. Summarize events in the 
story or rephrase difficult language to help 
you understand and remember what you’ve 
read. 
REVIEW 
Say to yourself… 
• So far, … 
• In other words…
Active Reading Strategies 
The Short Story 
Respond while you are reading. React to 
RESPOND different parts of the story. 
Say to yourself… 
• I like this character because… 
• I’d like to ask the writer why… 
• I wish I could visit this place because…

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Red riding hood and plot

  • 1. The Short Story Elements & Plot Structure
  • 2. The Short Story Definition • A short story is a form of short fictional narrative prose, tending to be more concise than longer works of fiction. The term most often refers to a work of fiction no longer than 20,000 words and no shorter than 1,000. •Short stories tend to be less complex than novels, focusing on only one incident, with a single plot, a single setting, a limited number of characters, and covering a short period of time. •Short stories have their origins in narrative storytelling and prose anecdote, a swiftly-sketched situation that comes rapidly to its point. •Of course, as with any art form, the exact characteristics of a short story will vary by author.
  • 3. The Short Story Origins Short stories date back to the story-telling traditions which produced such notable tales as Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. Short sections of these tales focused on individual narratives that could be told at one sitting. The overall arch of the story would only emerge through the telling of multiple sections of the tale. Fables, which tend to be folk tales with an explicitly expressed moral, were said by the Greek historian Herodotus to have been invented by a Greek slave named Aesop in the 6th century BCE (although other times and nationalities are also given for Aesop). These ancient fables are known today as Aesop's Fables. The other ancient form of short story, anecdotes, were popular during the years of the Roman Empire. Anecdotes functioned as a sort of parable, a brief realistic narration that embodies a point. Many of the surviving Roman anecdotes were later collected in the Gesta Romanorum in the 13th or 14th century. Anecdotes remained popular in Europe well into the 18th century, when the fictional anecdotal letters of Sir Roger de Coverley were published.
  • 4. The Short Story Origins In Europe, the oral story-telling tradition began to develop into written stories in the early 14th century, most notably with Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron. Both of these books are composed of individual short stories (which range from farce or humorous anecdotes to well-crafted literary fictions) set within a larger narrative story (a frame story), although the frame tale device was not adopted by all writers. At the end of the 16th century, some of the most popular short stories in Europe were the darkly tragic "novella" of Matteo Bandello (especially in their French translation). During the Renaissance, the term novella was used when referring to short stories. The mid 17th century in France saw the development of a refined short novel, the "nouvelle", by such authors as Madame de Lafayette. In the 1690s, traditional fairy tales began to be published (one of the most famous collections was by Charles Perrault). The appearance of Antoine Galland's first modern translation of the Thousand and One Nights (or Arabian Nights from 1704; another translation appeared in 1710–12) would have an enormous influence on the 18th century European short stories of Voltaire, Diderot and others.
  • 5. Elements Model Obviously, subject matter for short stories over the years has varied wildly, ranging from the mundane to the fantastic. Today, we will look at a familiar story, “Little Red Riding Hood,” to analyze it for elements of the short story.
  • 6. Elements Setting Setting is the time and place of a story’s action, and includes ideas, customs, values, and beliefs. “Little Red Riding Hood” takes place in the woods a long time ago.
  • 7. Elements Characters Characters are the actors in a story’s plot. They can be people, animals, ghosts, mythological creatures, or anything else within the author’s imagination. The PROTAGONIST is the main character. The ANTAGONIST is in conflict with the main character. Not all stories have protagonists. The characters in the story are Little Red Riding Hood, the Big Bad Wolf, the Grandmother, and the woodsman. Little Red Riding Hood is the protagonist. The Big Bad Wolf is the antagonist.
  • 8. Elements Point of View Point of view refers to the relationship of the NARRATOR, or storyteller, of the story. In FIRST-PERSON point of view, the narrator is a character, and is referred to using personal pronouns, including, “I.” In THIRD-PERSON point of view, the narrator reveals thoughts of only one character, referring to that character using pronouns like, “he” or “she.” In THIRD-PERSON OMNISCIENT point of view, the narrator knows everything about the story’s events and reveals the thoughts of all the story’s characters. “Little Red Riding Hood” is traditionally told from the THIRD-PERSON OMNISCIENT point of view: the narrator explains what Little Red Riding Hood is doing as well as what is happening to her and her grandmother.
  • 9. Elements Theme Theme is the central idea or message of a story, often a perception about life or human nature. STATED themes are directly presented in a story. IMPLIED themes must be inferred by considering all the elements of a story and asking what message about life is conveyed. The theme of “Little Red Riding Hood” is IMPLIED. While the narrator does not directly state a message, the reader can infer it: be suspicious of things and people that do not appear the way they should.
  • 10. Elements Plot Plot is the sequence of events in a story. Each event causes or leads to the next. Plot is often created through CONFLICT, a struggle between opposing forces. An EXTERNAL conflict is one between a character and an outside force, such as another character, nature, society, fate, etc. An INTERNAL conflict takes place within the mind of a character who is torn between opposing feelings or different courses of action. In “Little Red Riding Hood,” the conflict is EXTERNAL—Little Red Riding Hood versus The Big Bad Wolf.
  • 11. Short Story Triangle Most plots develop in five stages, and can be expressed in the form of a triangle. The chart, first developed in 1863 by Gustav Freytag and consequently also known as “Freytag’s Triangle,” is a diagram of plot structure which shows complication and emotional tension rising like one side of a pyramid toward its apex, which represents the climax of action. Once the climax is over, the descending side of the pyramid depicts the decrease in tension and complication as the work reaches its conclusion and denouement. Freytag designed the chart for discussing tragedy, but it can be applied to many kinds of fiction.
  • 12. Short Story Triangle Most plots develop in five stages: 1. EXPOSITION introduces the story’s characters, setting, and conflict. Exposition
  • 13. Short Story Triangle Most plots develop in five stages: 2. RISING ACTION occurs as complications, twists, or intensifications of the conflict occur Exposition Rising Action
  • 14. Short Story Triangle Most plots develop in five stages: Exposition Rising Action Climax 3. CLIMAX is the emotional high point of the story.
  • 15. Short Story Triangle Most plots develop in five stages: Exposition Rising Action Climax Falling Action 4. FALLING ACTION is the logical result of the climax.
  • 16. Short Story Triangle Climax Falling Action Most plots develop in five stages: 5. RESOLUTION presents the final outcome of the story. Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 17. Short Story Triangle Climax Falling Action Model: “Little Red Riding Hood” Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 18. Short Story Triangle Climax Falling Action Model: “Little Red Riding Hood” Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. The Big Bad Wolf spots Little Red walking in the woods and asks her where she’s going with the basket of treats. Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 19. Short Story Triangle Climax Falling Action Model: “Little Red Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. The Big Bad Wolf spots Little Red walking in the woods and asks her where she’s going with the basket of treats. The Wolf runs to the grandmother’s house , eats her, puts on her bonnet, glasses, and night gown, and climbs into her bed. Riding Hood” Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 20. Short Story Triangle Climax Falling Action Model: “Little Red Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. The Big Bad Wolf spots Little Red walking in the woods and asks her where she’s going with the basket of treats. Little Red arrives at her grandmother’s house and sits on a stool at the disguised wolf’s bedside. The Wolf runs to the grandmother’s house , eats her, puts on her bonnet, glasses, and night gown, and climbs into her bed. Riding Hood” Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 21. Short Story Triangle Climax Falling Action Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. The Big Bad Wolf spots Little Red walking in the woods and asks her where she’s going with the basket of treats. Little Red arrives at her grandmother’s house and sits on a stool at the disguised wolf’s bedside. The Wolf runs to the grandmother’s house , eats her, puts on her bonnet, glasses, and night gown, and climbs into her bed. Little Red questions all the things that appear different about her “grandmother.” Model: “Little Red Riding Hood” Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 22. Short Story Triangle Climax Little Red comments on the Wolf’s nose, eyes, ears, and teeth, and he responds by eating her in one gulp. Falling Action Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. The Big Bad Wolf spots Little Red walking in the woods and asks her where she’s going with the basket of treats. Little Red arrives at her grandmother’s house and sits on a stool at the disguised wolf’s bedside. The Wolf runs to the grandmother’s house , eats her, puts on her bonnet, glasses, and night gown, and climbs into her bed. Little Red questions all the things that appear different about her “grandmother.” Model: “Little Red Riding Hood” Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 23. Short Story Triangle Climax Little Red comments on the Wolf’s nose, eyes, ears, and teeth, and he responds by eating her in one gulp. Falling Action Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. The Big Bad Wolf spots Little Red walking in the woods and asks her where she’s going with the basket of treats. Little Red arrives at her grandmother’s house and sits on a stool at the disguised wolf’s bedside. The Wolf runs to the grandmother’s house , eats her, puts on her bonnet, glasses, and night gown, and climbs into her bed. Little Red questions all the things that appear different about her “grandmother.” The Woodsman arrives on the scene to discover the wolf dressed as the grandmother, and quickly surmises what has transpired in the woman’s cottage. Model: “Little Red Riding Hood” Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 24. Short Story Triangle Climax Little Red comments on the Wolf’s nose, eyes, ears, and teeth, and he responds by eating her in one gulp. Falling Action Model: “Little Red Riding Hood” Little Red Riding Hood has prepared a basket of goodies for her grandmother. She begins walking through dangerous woods to deliver the basket. The Big Bad Wolf spots Little Red walking in the woods and asks her where she’s going with the basket of treats. Little Red arrives at her grandmother’s house and sits on a stool at the disguised wolf’s bedside. The Wolf runs to the grandmother’s house , eats her, puts on her bonnet, glasses, and night gown, and climbs into her bed. Little Red questions all the things that appear different about her “grandmother.” The Woodsman arrives on the scene to discover the wolf dressed as the grandmother, and quickly surmises what has transpired in the woman’s cottage. The Woodsman kills the wolf and out step the Grandmother and Little Red, happy and safe. Exposition Rising Action Resolution
  • 25. Active Reading Strategies The Short Story Make educated guesses about what will happen next by combining clues in the story with what you already know. Predicting helps you anticipate events and stay alert to the less obvious parts of a story. PREDICT Say to yourself… • I think the title might mean… • I think this character is going to… • Now I think he or she will… • My first prediction doesn’t match what I read. Now I think…
  • 26. Active Reading Strategies The Short Story Draw parallels between people, places, and events in the story and the people, places, and events in your life. CONNECT Ask yourself… • How would the main character act in my situation? • How would I act in the main character’s situation? • When have I felt the same way as the character? • What parts of my life does this remind me of? • What other stories does this remind me of?
  • 27. Active Reading Strategies The Short Story Ask yourself questions to help you clarify QUESTION the story as you go along. Ask yourself… • Do I understand what I’ve read so far? • Why did the character say that? • What’s going on here? • What does this mean?
  • 28. Active Reading Strategies The Short Story In your mind, form pictures of what is happening in the story. Pay attention to the details the writer gives you, and make them a part of your reading experience. VISUALIZE Ask yourself… • How does this scene, character, or object look? • Who is in this scene? • Where are the characters in relation to one another and to their surroundings?
  • 29. Active Reading Strategies The Short Story Form opinions and make judgments about the story while you are reading—not just after you have finished. EVALUATE Ask yourself… • Does this turn of events make sense? • Is this character believable? • What is particularly effective about this writer’s style? • Do I agree with this idea?
  • 30. Active Reading Strategies The Short Story Pause every page or two to think about your reading. Summarize events in the story or rephrase difficult language to help you understand and remember what you’ve read. REVIEW Say to yourself… • So far, … • In other words…
  • 31. Active Reading Strategies The Short Story Respond while you are reading. React to RESPOND different parts of the story. Say to yourself… • I like this character because… • I’d like to ask the writer why… • I wish I could visit this place because…