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College Level Short Stories

Complex works for advanced literary study

7 stories available
The hills across the valley of the Ebro were long and white. On this side there was no shade and no trees and the statio...”
Ernest Hemingway1,500 wordsIntermediate

Hills Like White Elephants

An American man and a young woman sit at a train station in Spain, drinking and waiting. Through carefully constructed dialogue full of subtext, they discuss an unspecified "operation" - implied to be an abortion. The conversation reveals a power imbalance, emotional disconnect, and an uncertain future for their relationship.

Literary FictionSubtextDialogue
True! -- nervous -- very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you say that I am mad? The disease had...”
Edgar Allan Poe2,100 wordsIntermediate

The Tell-Tale Heart

An unnamed narrator insists upon their sanity while describing the methodical killing of an old man. Driven mad by the old man's "vulture eye," the narrator commits the act with precision, dismembers the body, and hides it beneath the floorboards. When police arrive, the narrator's guilt manifests as an unbearable phantom heartbeat, leading to a confession.

Gothic HorrorPsychological FictionUnreliable NarratorGothic Atmosphere
Knowing that Mrs. Mallard was afflicted with a heart trouble, great care was taken to break to her as gently as possible...”
Kate Chopin1,000 wordsBeginner

The Story of an Hour

Mrs. Mallard learns of her husband's death in a railroad accident. After initial grief, alone in her room she discovers an unexpected feeling of freedom and independence. She whispers "free, free, free!" and begins to imagine a self-directed future. When her husband unexpectedly walks through the door alive, she collapses and dies - doctors say of "joy that kills."

Literary FictionIronySymbolism
She was one of those pretty, charming young women who are born, as if by an error of destiny, into a family of clerks....”
Guy de Maupassant4,000 wordsIntermediate

The Necklace

Mathilde Loisel, a middle-class woman who dreams of wealth and luxury, borrows a diamond necklace from a wealthy friend for an elegant ball. She loses the necklace and, rather than confessing, she and her husband secretly replace it with an identical one, going deeply into debt. After ten years of grueling labor to repay the debt, Mathilde encounters her friend who reveals the original necklace was paste - worth almost nothing.

Literary FictionIronyForeshadowing
The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge....”
Edgar Allan Poe2,300 wordsIntermediate

The Cask of Amontillado

Montresor, nursing a grudge over an unspecified insult, lures his acquaintance Fortunato deep into underground catacombs during carnival season under the pretense of evaluating a rare cask of Amontillado sherry. Exploiting Fortunato's pride as a wine connoisseur and his drunken state, Montresor chains him inside a narrow recess and methodically walls him in with stone and mortar, entombing him alive. Fifty years later, Montresor recounts the crime, and the remains have never been found.

Gothic HorrorMysteryUnreliable NarratorIrony
A man stood upon a railroad bridge in northern Alabama, looking down into the swift water twenty feet below....”
Ambrose Bierce3,800 wordsAdvanced

An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge

Peyton Farquhar, a Confederate sympathizer, stands on the Owl Creek bridge about to be hanged by Union soldiers. A flashback reveals he was tricked by a disguised Federal scout into attempting to burn the bridge. At the moment of execution, Farquhar appears to escape: the rope breaks, he plunges into the creek, evades gunfire, and treks through the wilderness toward home. Just as he reaches his wife, the narrative reveals the entire escape was a dying hallucination — Farquhar hangs dead from the bridge, his neck broken.

Literary FictionPsychological FictionUnreliable NarratorStream of Consciousness
Day had broken cold and grey, exceedingly cold and grey, when the man turned aside from the main Yukon trail and climbed...”
Jack London7,000 wordsIntermediate

To Build a Fire

A newcomer to the Yukon sets out alone on a brutally cold day despite warnings from an experienced old-timer. Accompanied only by a husky dog whose instincts sense the danger the man ignores, he presses forward through seventy-five-below temperatures. When he breaks through hidden ice and soaks his feet, his attempts to build a life-saving fire fail — first smothered by snow from a tree, then lost when his frozen hands drop the last matches. Unable to run to safety, the man succumbs to the cold, while the dog, guided by instinct rather than arrogance, trots on toward camp and warmth.

AdventureLiterary FictionImageryForeshadowing
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