What do you think when people think of the word "puppy"? It is possible to express puppies as cute, cute, and cute friends. However, people regard animals as threats and responsibilities and even treat them as a source of delicious food. Why does this word contain so much meaning? Past experience and prejudice may affect these conflicting views and attitudes. For example, affection for a puppy may grow because it grows with a puppy and therefore has a deep affection for animals.
George Sanders's "Puppy" alternates between two women, Mary and Kelly's viewpoint. This is a simple story structure. The story is divided into four equal sized parts. Both Mary and Kelly got 2. I think that each of these parts can be called vignette. Saunders will provide a useful scene for each woman's life before allowing women to interact. All the scenes are spoken by a third party and I feel that they are coming from the character's mind. The first scene is focused on Maria, the mother of two children who have problems but are still living a good life. Her son Josh is prone to violent outbreaks, but since it played Italian bread video games, it is softened. This game simulates the life of a baker who has to prepare bread while avoiding bloating of wolves and fierce attacks of animals such as falling rocks. Josh continued to play this game and made him a mellow. Mary dominates her life and looks very happy.
A story like a puppy of George Sanders brings the opposite effect. Mother and two children drove to the house of the woman, and she was selling the puppy for sale. "I like it, mother, I want it!" She cried the daughter while hugging the dog. This is a situation you can easily imagine until the mother see a little boy trapped in the backyard tree. In this way, normal interaction is completely different. This concept is called "depreciation". Created by Russian literary Viktor Shklovsky in 1917, the concept is to understand deeper by presenting familiar things in strange ways (and vice versa). When you really think about it, we encounter dishonor every day - not just the books we read - in real life.