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  1. Happy Endings’ is a short story (or, perhaps more accurately, a piece of metafiction) which was first published in Margaret Atwood’s 1983 collection, Murder in the Dark. The story offers six alternative storylines which feature a relationship between a man and a woman.

  2. Happy Endings Lyrics. John and Mary meet. What happens next? If you want a happy ending, try A. A. John and Mary fall in love and get married. They both have worthwhile and remunerative jobs...

  3. "Happy Endings" is a short story by Margaret Atwood. It was first published in a 1983 Canadian collection, Murder in the Dark, and highlighted during the nomination period for the 2017/2018 Galley Beggar Press Short Story Prize.

  4. 25 de mai. de 2021 · Analysis of Margaret Atwood’s Happy Endings. By NASRULLAH MAMBROL onMay 25, 2021. An innovative and oft-anthologized story that demonstrates the arbitrariness of any author’s choice of an ending, “Happy Endings” offers six different endings from which the reader may choose.

    • Version A
    • Version B
    • Version C
    • Version D
    • Version E
    • Version F

    Version A is the one Atwood refers to as the "happy ending." In this version, everything goes well, the characters have wonderful lives, and nothing unexpected happens. Atwood manages to make version A boring to the point of comedy. For example, she uses the phrase "stimulating and challenging" three times—once to describe John and Mary's jobs, onc...

    Version B is considerably messier than A. Though Mary loves John, John "merely uses her body for selfish pleasure and ego gratification of a tepid kind." The character development in B—while a bit painful to witness—is much deeper than in A. After John eats the dinner Mary cooked, has sex with her and falls asleep, she stays awake to wash the dishe...

    In C, John is "an older man" who falls in love with Mary, 22. She doesn't love him, but she sleeps with him because she "feels sorry for him because he's worried about his hair falling out." Mary really loves James, also 22, who has "a motorcycle and a fabulous record collection." It soon becomes clear that John is having an affair with Mary precis...

    In this version, Fred and Madge get along well and have a lovely life. But their house is destroyed by a tidal wave and thousands are killed. Fred and Madge survive and live as the characters in A.

    Version E is fraught with complications—if not a tidal wave, then a "bad heart." Fred dies, and Madge dedicates herself to charity work. As Atwood writes: It doesn't matter whether it's Fred's bad heart or Madge's cancer, or whether the spouses are "kind and understanding" or "guilty and confused." Something always interrupts the smooth trajectory ...

    Every version of the story loops back, at some point, to version A—the "happy ending." As Atwood explains, no matter what the details are, "[y]ou'll still end up with A." Here, her use of second person reaches its peak. She's led the reader through a series of attempts to try to imagine a variety of stories, and she's made it seem within reach—as i...

  5. "Happy Endings" da autora canadense Margaret Atwood é um exemplo de metaficção. Ou seja, é uma história que comenta as convenções da narrativa e chama a atenção para si mesma como uma história. Com aproximadamente 1.300 palavras, também é um exemplo de ficção em flash.

  6. Margaret Atwood’s “Happy Endings” is metafiction—a short story about the writing of stories that was first published in Atwood’s 1983 collection, Murder in the Dark. Written to an audience identified as “you,” the story directs readers through a series of distinct yet interlocking variations to explore the paradoxical nature of ...

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