2.7 Exploring Genres
Site: | Cowichan Valley School District - Moodle |
Course: | ELA5, CSS, Sferrazza |
Book: | 2.7 Exploring Genres |
Printed by: | Guest user |
Date: | Saturday, 23 November 2024, 8:34 AM |
Learning Targets
By the end of the lesson, you should be able to say YES to the following questions.
- Can I recognize and appreciate how different features, forms, and genres of texts reflect various purposes, audiences, and messages?
- Can I read text and identify clues to easily classify what genre it is?
- Think critically, creatively, and reflectively to explore ideas within, between, and beyond texts?
Short Story Samples
Here is a small taste sampling of stories from different genres. You will need to go to your Learning Guide to answer questions and do exercises as you read the stories. Enjoy!
The Earth Game
Earth Game
by Pam Conrad
Not very long ago, in a meadow not too far from here, some children found a ball of twine lying in the grass.
“Watch me,” called the oldest girl. And she tied the end of the string to her finger and tossed the ball in the air.
Her brother caught it and wrapped the string around his own finger. Then he pitched it across to his friend. The twine unwound just enough as it sailed through the air. His friend caught the ball, wrapped the string around his thumb, and threw it over to someone else.
After many tosses back and forth, the ball had unwound to just a loose end, and the smallest child wound that around his finger. And there they were, joined in a circle by the twine that wove a net at their center.
“Now look,” said the oldest girl, and she wiggled her finger.
“I felt that!” said her brother.
“So did I,” said his friend.
And standing very still, one by one, they each wiggled a finger until they could feel the twine move with even the gentlest tug.
“Now, let’s be the Earth,” said the girl. She closed her eyes, and her voice lifted over the meadow. “I am a jungle in Africa, and someone is shooting an elephant for his tusks.” She moved her finger. They all felt the tug and grew sad.
“I’m the Arctic Ocean,” said her brother, “and an oil tanker is hitting an iceberg and spilling oil over me. Soon all the birds will be black and slick and won’t fly anymore.” He tugged, and they were silent.
“I am a big city, and no one can see the stars in the sky because the air is thick with smoke and fumes from my factories.” The gentle tug passed around them.
“I was once a farm, but the sunflowers and rows of corn are gone. Today I am a mall.” They each felt the sad tug.
They stopped tugging. It was as though a thick cloud had passed before the sun and darkened their day. It was very still, except for a bird whizzing by over their heads.
Then the smallest boy smiled. He moved his finger. “I’m a town, and in a backyard somebody’s putting out seed for the winter birds.” He tugged again, and their faces lit up.
“Yes!” The tallest girl raised her hands, and the pull was felt by all. “I’m a highway, and people are walking alongside me, picking up bottles and cans for recycling.” She wiggled her fingers and laughed and they could all feel it.
“I’m a neighborhood, and people are planting trees along my concrete sidewalks.”
“I am an ocean, and fishermen are freeing the dolphins from their nets.”
“I’m a herd of wild mustangs, and someone has given me land and turned me loose.”
“I’m a lonely country road, and somebody’s painting my mailbox red.”
They all laughed. Then they raised their hands, lifting the net of twine higher and higher. They could feel the certain pull of all the things people could do to make a better world.
And that is how—not too long ago, in a meadow not very far from here—a ball of twine was the beginning of the Earth game.
“The Earth Game,” by Pam Conrad. From The Big Book of Our Planet, edited by Anne Durell, et. al. ©1993 by Dutton Children’s Books. pp. 55–56, 58–59.
Learning Guide
If you did not complete your Learning Guide activities for The Earth Game while you were reading it, please do this now before continuing to the next story.
Piers and the Begonia
PIERS AND THE BEGONIA
By Joan Lennon
Piers was embarrassed.
He knew he should be proud; after all, he was the Keeper of the Threshold Beast at Castle Camphor in the Land of Whelm, and that was a most important thing. Every castle needed a Threshold Beast to sit at the front gate and guard against the Dangers of the Day and the Night. Some castles had Lions or Wolves to guard them, some had Sharp-Tusked Boars or Great-Horned Bulls, and one castle Piers knew of even had a Mythical Griffin. But Castle Camphor didn’t have anything like that.
Castle Camphor had a Pot Plant—a Begonia.
Piers knew, of course, that the Begonia was no ordinary Pot Plant. It was ancient and wily and wise, and some said that if the need were great enough, it could even speak.
“Oh, ahrrr,” the oldest men-at-arms would say, “I’m minded of the year of the plague of woolly cats, oooh, terrible it were, cats everywhere. ‘Tweren’t no place at all that didn’t have woolly cats tumbling out of it. And what it were that the Begonia said to them I can’t at this moment bring to memory, but it made them scat and no mistake. Oh. Ahrrr.”
The oldest men-at-arms could tell you a lot of stories like that, but they didn’t really help Piers.
Verily and forsooth, he thought, I feel the fool. Instead of walking a Wolf or grooming a Griffin or polishing up the sharpest of a big Boar’s teeth, I am, alas, only in charge of a Pot Plant. All the other Keepers point at me behind my back and giggle and make jokes. ‘Tis awful.
Piers was not mistaken. At the Annual Keepers’ Parade, amidst all the fierce
Beasts, people couldn’t help but notice Piers and his Begonia.
Now it must be said that all the while Piers was going on about being embarrassed and the Begonia was sitting upon the threshold looking harmless and pretty, none of the Usual Dangers ever came near Castle Camphor—not for a long, long time.
But then, one day, a New Danger came into the Land of Whelm—a Danger no one had met before. His name was Ravening Scourge, and he was big and hairy and scaly and ugly and, more than anything, he was hungry.
Up came Ravening Scourge to the castle gate.
“ROAR!” said the Lion or the Wolf or the Boar or the Bull or the Magical, Mythical Griffin.
“MERGLE!” said the Ravening Scourge, and without fail, the Threshold Beast would go “Gulp!” and turn a little pale, shuffle its feet, and then suddenly run away. Not one of them had seen anything like the Ravening Scourge before!
Ravening Scourge then lolloped into the castle and began to eat. And eat. And eat. If you could run or fly, you were all right, but things that couldn’t move, like potatoes or porridge or all the grain stored for the winter—anything like that didn’t have a chance.
People began to get worried. The oldest men-at-arms began to say, “Ooooh, ahrrr, ‘tis worse than the plague of woolly cats,” and everyone else began to say, “But what will we eat till spring?”
But the Ravening Scourge didn’t care. He had it all his own way and he ate and he ate and he ate, until he had eaten all the other castles out of house and home.
And, then, he came to Castle Camphor.
Piers could hear him coming, lolloping over the hills, his great stomach rumbling. Piers hid in the shadows of the gateway while the Begonia sat peacefully in the sunlight. And there, suddenly, was the Ravening Scourge. His huge eyes tolled in anticipation and his hairy nose dripped and he was all set to go straight into Castle Camphor. Suddenly the Begonia Spoke.
“Prithee,” said the Begonia, “thou shouldst not lollop past me without a word. By mine honor, ‘tis not a courtesy.”
Piers was surprised, but the Ravening Scourge was astounded.
“Mergle!” gaped the Scourge. He had met very few Pot Plants before, and none that had ever spoken to him.
“Mergle to you, too,” said the Begonia, “and if you have come here to eat us out of house and home, you may forget it. I am the Guardian of the Gate, the Threshold Beast, and none pass here against my will. Dangers may not enter Castle Camphor, except they eat me first.”
“Nerk!” said the Scourge. An idea was coming to him very, very slowly.
“Do you know what you are doing?” Piers whispered anxiously from the shadows.
The Begonia whispered back, “Verily and forsooth, I do.”
While they were whispering together, the Scourge’s Idea finally arrived. Without another word, he leaped forward and in three gulps he had eaten the Begonia, practically down to the soil.
Piers let out a shriek.
“You Horrible Hairy Scourge!” he cried. “You Ghastly Gruesome Great Galoot! You Slimy Scaly Smelly Sneaky Slummocker! You Big…” And Piers ran out of breath.
The Ravening Scourge had been looking rather smug because he had had an Idea and a Begonia, but now his expression started to change. He began to look uncomfortable and to shift about on his scaly feet. His huge eyes began to roll in different directions, and his great nose began to sniff. Then he turned green. Not a spring-meadow green or a tree-in-summer green, but more of a moldy, seasick, stomachache green.
Begonias do not make good eating.
“Erp!” said the Scourge. He did not feel hungry anymore. He did not like the Land of Whelm anymore. He did not think he would ever come here again. And having thought so much, the Ravening Scourge lolloped unsteadily off and was soon out of sight.
Poor Piers hugged the pot of the Begonia in his arms and cried and cried. But then, as he sat there in the gateway, he heard a voice coming from the pot.
“Verily and forsooth,” it said. “What a palaver! ‘Twas but a good pruning the Scourge gave me. Cease your weeping, Piers, and leave me in the sun. You shall be my Keeper these many years hence.”
And it was true. The Begonia grew again, leafier than ever, and for many years, Piers was the Keeper of the Threshold Beast at Castle Camphor in the Land of Whelm. At the Annual Keepers’ Parade, he carried his Begonia in front of everybody else. And he wasn’t embarrassed anymore.
-taken from ReadMeAStoryInk.com (This story originally appeared in Cricket Magazine.)
The Third Wish
The Third Wish
A short story by Joan Aiken
Once there was a man who was driving in his car at dusk on a spring evening through part of the forest of Savernake. His name was Mr. Peters.
The primroses were just beginning but the trees were still bare, and it was cold; the birds had stopped singing an hour ago. As Mr. Peters entered a straight, empty stretch of road he seemed to hear a faint crying, and a struggling and thrashing, as if somebody was in trouble far away in the trees. He left his car and climbed the mossy bank beside the road. Beyond the bank was an open slope of beech trees leading down to thorn bushes through which he saw the gleam of water. He stood a moment waiting to try and discover where the noise was coming from, and presently heard a rustling and some strange cries in a voice which was almost human-and yet there was something too hoarse about it at one time and too clear and sweet at another. Mr. Peters ran down the hill and as he neared the bushes he saw something white among them which was trying to extricate itself; coming closer he found that it was a swan that had become entangled in the thorns growing on the bank of the canal.
The bird struggled all the more frantically as he approached, looking at him with hate in its yellow eyes, and when he took hold of it to free it, hissed at him, pecked him, and thrashed dangerously with its wings which were powerful enough to break his arm. Nevertheless he managed to release it from the thorns, and carrying it tightly with one arm, holding the snaky head well away with the other hand (for he did not wish his eyes pecked out), he took it to the verge of the canal and dropped it in. The swan instantly assumed great dignity and sailed out to the middle of the water, where it put itself to rights with much dabbling and preening, smoothing its feathers with little showers of drops. Mr. Peters waited to make sure that it was all right and had suffered no damage in its struggles.
Presently the swan, when it was satisfied with its appearance, floated in to the bank once more. And in a moment, instead of the great white bird, there was a little man all in green with a golden crown and long beard, standing by the water. He had fierce glittering eyes and looked by no means friendly.
"Well, Sir," he said threateningly, "I see you are presumptuous enough to know some of the laws of magic. You think that because you have rescued--by pure good fortune--the King of the Forest from a difficulty, you should have some fabulous reward."
"I expect three wishes, no more and no less," answered Mr. Peters, looking at him steadily and with composure.
"Three wishes, he wants, the clever man. Well, I have yet to hear of the human being who made any good use of his three wishes. They mostly end up worse off than they started. Take your three wishes then-" he flung three dead leaves in the air "-don't blame me if you spend the last wish in undoing the work of the other two."
Mr. Peters caught the leaves and put two of them carefully in his notecase. When he looked up the swan was sailing about in the middle of the water again, flicking the drops angrily down its long neck.
Mr. Peters stood for some minutes reflecting on how he should use his reward. He knew very well that the gift of three magic wishes was one which brought trouble more often than not, and he had no intention of being like the forester who first wished by mistake for a sausage, and then in a rage wished it on the end of his wife's nose, and then had to use his last wish in getting it off again. Mr. Peters had most of the things which he wanted and was very content with his life. The only thing that troubled him was that he was a little lonely, and had no companion for his old age. He decided to use his first wish and to keep the other two in case of an emergency. Taking a thorn he pricked his tongue with it, to remind himself not to utter rash wishes aloud. Then holding the third leaf and gazing round him at the dusky undergrowth, the primroses, great beeches and the blue-green water of the canal, he said:
"I wish I had a wife as beautiful as the forest."
A tremendous quacking and splashing broke out on the surface of the water. He thought that it was the swan laughing at him. Taking no notice he made his way through the darkening woods to his car, wrapped himself up in the rug and went to sleep.
When he awoke it was morning and the birds were beginning to call. Coming along
the track towards him was the most beautiful creature he had ever seen, with eyes as blue-green as the canal, hair as dusky as the bushes, and skin as white as the feathers of swans.
"Are you the wife that I wished for?" asked Mr. Peters.
"Yes I am," she replied. "My name is Leita." She stepped into the car beside him and they drove off to the church on the outskirts of the forest, where they were married. Then he took her to his house in a remote and lovely valley and showed her all his treasures --the bees in their white hives, the Jersey cows, the hyacinths, the silver candlesticks, the blue cups and the lustre bowl for putting primroses in. She admired everything, but what pleased her most was the river which ran by the foot of his garden.
"Do swans come up here?" she asked.
"Yes, I have often seen swans there on the river," he told her, and she smiled.
Leita made him a good wife. She was gentle and friendly, busied herself about the house garden, polished the bowls, milked the cows and mended his socks. But as time went by Mr. Peters began to feel that she was not happy. She seemed restless, wandered much in the garden, and sometimes when he came back from the fields he would find the house empty and she would only return after half an hour or so with no explanation of where she had been. On these occasions she was always especially tender and would put out his slippers to warm and cook his favorite dish-Welsh rarebit with wild strawberries-for supper.
One evening he was returning home along the river path when he saw Leita in front of him, down by the water. A swan had sailed up to the verge and she had her arms round its neck and the swan's head rested against her cheek. She was weeping, and as he came nearer he saw that tears were rolling, too, from the swan's eyes.
"Leita, what is it?" he asked, very troubled.
"This is my sister," she answered. "I can't bear being separated from her."
Now he understood that Leita was really a swan from the forest, and this made him very sad because when a human being marries a bird it always leads to sorrow.
"I could use my second wish to give your sister human shape, so that she could be a companion to you," he suggested.
"No, no," she cried, "I couldn't ask that of her."
"Is it so very hard to be a human being?" asked Mr. Peters sadly.
"Very, very hard," she answered. "Don't you love me at all, Leita?"
"Yes, I do, I do love you," she said, and there were tears in her eyes again. "But I miss the old life in the forest, the cool grass and the mist rising off the river at sunrise and the feel of the water sliding over my feathers as my sister and I drifted along the stream."
"Then shall I use my second wish to turn you back into a swan again?" he asked, and his tongue pricked to remind him of the old King's words, and his heart swelled with grief inside him.
"Who would darn your socks and cook your meals and see to the hens?"
"I'd do it myself as I did before I married you," he said, trying to sound cheerful.
She shook her head. "No, I could not be as unkind to you as that. I am partly a swan, but I am also partly a human being now. I will stay with you."
Poor Mr. Peters was very distressed on his wife's account and did his best to make her life happier, taking her for drives in the car, finding beautiful music for her to listen to on the radio, buying clothes for her and even suggesting a trip round the world. But she said no to that; she would prefer to stay in their own house near the river.
He noticed that she spent more and more time baking wonderful cakes-jam puffs, petits fours, éclairs and meringues. One day, he saw her take a basketful down to the river and he guessed that she was giving them to her sister.
He built a seat for her by the river, and the two sisters spent hours together there, communicating in some wordless manner. For a time he thought that all would be well, but then he saw how thin and pale she was growing. One night when he had been late doing the accounts he came up to bed and found her weeping in her sleep and calling: "Rhea! Rhea! I can't understand what you say! Oh, wait for me, take me with you!"
Then he knew that it was hopeless and she would never be happy as a human. He stooped down and kissed her goodbye, then took another leaf from his notecase, blew it out of the window, and used up his second wish.
Next moment instead of Leita there was a sleeping swan lying across the bed with its head under its wing. He carried it out of the house and down to the brink of the river,
and then he said, "Leita! Leita!" to waken her, and gently put her into the water.
She gazed round her in astonishment for a moment, and then came up to him and rested her head lightly against his hand; next instant she was flying away over the trees towards the heart of the forest.
He heard a harsh laugh behind him, and turning round saw the old King looking at him with a malicious expression.
"Well, my friend! You don't seem to have managed so wonderfully with your first two wishes, do you? What will you do with the last? Turn yourself into a swan? Or turn
Leita back into a girl?"
"I shall do neither," said Mr. Peters calmly. "Human beings and swans are better in their own shapes."
But for all that he looked sadly over towards the forest where Leita had flown, and walked slowly back to his empty house.
Next day, he saw two swans swimming at the bottom of the garden, and one of them wore the gold chain he had given Leita after their marriage; she came up and rubbed her head against his hand.
Mr. Peters and his two swans came to be well known in that part of the country; people used to say that he talked to the swans and they understood him as well as his neighbors. Many people were a little frightened of him. There was a story that once when thieves tried to break into his house, they were set upon by two huge white birds which carried them off bodily and dropped them in the river.
As Mr. Peters grew old, everyone wondered at his contentment. Even when he was bent with rheumatism, he would not think of moving to a drier spot, but went slowly about his work, milking the cows and collecting the honey and eggs, with the two swans always somewhere close at hand.
Sometimes people who knew his story would say to him: "Mr. Peters, why don't you wish for another wife?"
"Not likely," he would answer serenely. "Two wishes were enough for me, I reckon. I've learned that even if your wishes are granted they don't always better you. I'll stay faithful to Leita."
One autumn night, passers-by along the road heard the mournful sound of two swans singing.
All night the song went on, sweet and harsh, sharp and clear. In the morning, Mr. Peters was found peacefully dead in his bed with a smile of great happiness on his face. In between his hands, which lay clasped on his breast, were a withered leaf and a white feather.