In the most traditional happy end story, there seems to be evidence of supernaturalism. But Steven Crane missed all fairy tale elements and mysterious creatures with his "open ship". Throughout the story there is a constant example of primitive, realistic, and indifferent parts of life. Stephen Klein's "One Boat" is naturally revealed by using linguistic, literary and thematic elements. First, the use of crane words plays a major role in the natural feeling of the story.
Stephen Klein's Leaf Boat "Boat on Leaf" Four people have lost a boat after a while and drifted across the moon with an open boat. Now, on a sunny day, men begin grabbing the full gravity of their situation. Please understand that their main confrontation lies between man and nature, in this case raging waters. In the short novel "One Leaf Flat Boat", He Quan bloomed in the story "One Leaf Flat Boat" which Hequan described every 2 days. The story is centered on four people: the chef, journalist, Billy, the only character in the story, the captain. After their ships sank, they were trapped in a lifeboat in a rough sea near the coast of Florida. They can finally see the coast, but the waves are very big.
"OPEN BOAT, THE" Stephen Crane (1897) In June 1897, a satirical and naturalistic story of Steven Crane "Open Ship" was published in SCRIBNER magazine. This story is a fictitious explanation of Klein's own experience six months ago and when he sank, he and the other four people floated on the coast of Florida for 30 hours. In this story, Klein uses his style and his idea to dispel the general concept of social Darwinism in the second half of the nineteenth century. (See Darwin, Charles Robert.) As with Klein's experience, four men were on board: correspondent, chef, strong refueling person and injured captain. These men are fighting the ocean and it looks like a few days. The correspondent and the oil pot are replaced by a boat, and the chef keeps drinking water from the boat. (831) At dawn, men stop declaring to argue and decide to swim on the coast.
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)