The Albanian secret of Alice Monroe has interpreted her characteristic way and it is difficult to trace the technique of Alice Munroe's story back to the specific development of a short story. This may be because it was written only through careful observation, as in many of her other short stories. In her short story, it seems as if she is trying to turn her ordinary ordinary world into a mysterious and obstructive one, as if she were seen in Vandals.
Through Alice Munro's "open secret", the talker appreciates Maureen's wonderful ability to interpret various language forms, from utterances to silent words and even body lance. With the emphasis on the ability of the narrator to interpret the words of Maureen, Maureen eventually turned into a detective to solve the mystery of Heather Bell's disappearance. Maureen is portrayed as the master in almost every aspect of the language, but the narrator emphasizes one aspect of Maureen's hard-working language. In the final analysis, it is the lack of skill in this field - this is the only flaw in her armored language - it did not do enough for Maureen to solve the mystery of Heather Bell's disappearance.
2 In my article title "Secret of Alice Munro", I am using the German term "Ort" in a special issue of Alice Munro's open letter. This means to define the secret art of Munro's secret. The secret that can be found in Munro's story feels their presence through verbal mistakes or incomplete languages. Héliane Ventura is a professor of contemporary British literature at the University of Toulouse and Remilia. Her research subjects are mainly the relationship between words and images, the resurgence of ancient myths in British contemporary literature, in particular the theory of contemporary short stories in the British world. She will be a visiting researcher at the Advanced Institute of Humanities in Edinburgh University in 2010 and will study the relationship between James Hogg's folk songs and memoirs and Alice Munroe's short story.