Literature is a collection of fictitious works and nonfiction works introducing various themes and tones that allow readers to feel and respond in some way. Literature is a sentence that expresses all kinds of words and meanings. Literary works entertain readers by presenting various intellectual, moral and social problems. Readers' beliefs are challenged when individuals are presented with emotions related to various "thoughts, past, future, and the ultimate value of the story" (Jewell 1).
Realistic literature features authentic characters, scenes, and plots and is described in an intuitive and detailed way (as with visual art works, in order to be real it is simple and clear must be). The event is idealistic, wonderful, not impossible, life and society are presented both positively and negatively. The creation of photorealistic literature is usually by French writer Gustave Flaubert, whose masterpiece "Madame Bovary" tells the village doctor's wife's boredom pain.
After the Second World War, this American novel had a splendid shape. Realism, metafiction, postmodern, absurd, autobiography, short, long, fragment, feminism, conscious flow - these and more labels can be applied to a wide range of American novelists. In addition to their proximity and contact with modern American society, Little is uniting them. In a typical novel, 'destroyed movement' started shortly in the 1950s, but it has a lasting influence on contemporary American poetry. Allen Ginsberg's "Howl" (Howl, 1956) overturns the formal, mostly traditional poetic customs that dominate American poetry. Raoul was surprised and deeply moved and rebuilt his expectations for American poetry since the latter half of the 20th century. Among the important poets of this age