All Techniques

Irony in Short Stories

Stories featuring dramatic, situational, or verbal irony

7 stories available
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
One dollar and eighty-seven cents. That was all. And sixty cents of it was in pennies. Pennies saved one and two at a ti...”
O. Henry2,000 wordsBeginner

The Gift of the Magi

Della and Jim are a young married couple too poor to buy Christmas gifts. Della sells her beautiful long hair to buy a platinum watch chain for Jim. Jim, meanwhile, sells his treasured pocket watch to buy decorative combs for Della's hair. Each sacrifices their most prized possession for the other, only to find their gifts are now useless - yet their love is the true gift.

Literary FictionIronyForeshadowing
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
My aunt will be down presently, Mr. Nuttel, said a very self-possessed young lady of fifteen; in the meantime you must t...”
Saki (H.H. Munro)1,100 wordsBeginner

The Open Window

Framton Nuttel, a nervous man seeking a rest cure in the countryside, visits the Sappleton household with a letter of introduction. While waiting for Mrs. Sappleton, he is entertained by her fifteen-year-old niece Vera, who tells him a tragic tale about Mrs. Sappleton's husband and brothers who went hunting three years ago and never returned - their bodies never found. She claims Mrs. Sappleton keeps the window open in hope of their return. When Mrs. Sappleton arrives and mentions her husband will be back from shooting soon, Nuttel is horrified. When three figures approach across the lawn carrying guns, he flees in terror. Vera calmly explains his departure with yet another invented story.

HumorLiterary FictionIronyDialogue
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
In the very olden time there lived a semi-barbaric king, whose ideas, though somewhat polished and sharpened by the prog...”
Frank R. Stockton4,200 wordsIntermediate

The Lady, or the Tiger?

A semi-barbaric king administers justice through a public arena where the accused must choose between two doors: one hiding a hungry tiger, the other a beautiful woman he must marry. When the king discovers his daughter's forbidden love affair with a low-born courtier, the young man is sent to the arena. The princess, torn between jealousy and love, discovers which door holds which fate. She signals her lover toward the right-hand door, but the story famously ends without revealing whether she sent him to the tiger or to another woman's arms.

Literary FictionFables & AllegoryIronyAllegory
In compliance with the request of a friend of mine, who wrote me from the East, I called on good-natured, garrulous old ...”
Mark Twain2,700 wordsIntermediate

The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County

The narrator visits a mining camp to ask about a man named Smiley and is cornered by Simon Wheeler, who launches into a long, winding tale about Jim Smiley — a compulsive gambler who trained a frog named Dan'l Webster to out-jump any competitor. When a cunning stranger fills the frog with quail shot, Smiley loses his prized bet, and the narrator barely escapes Wheeler's endless storytelling.

HumorLiterary FictionDialogueIrony
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