The Moon and Sixpence
Why does the author tell the story from Crabbe's point of view?
Examine the following sentence: Crabbe is an unreliablenarrator. Think of an argument in support of the statement andof an argument against.
Examine the following sentence: Crabbe is an unreliablenarrator. Think of an argument in support of the statement andof an argument against.
The story is told from the first-person viewpoint of the narrator. The narrator is a writer, and he knew Charles Strickland at the beginning of Strickland's painting career. Thus, the story only includes information that the narrator himself has access to, and he is an ordinary man, with no divine knowledge. The narrator is elusive about his own identity, revealing little about his own character, except through descriptions of his interactions with others. He hints that he is English writer George Crabbe, and notes that Crabbe has fallen into obscurity. Crabbe is often in the dark about what is going on, even when he is in the midst of the action. In addition, he does not even like Strickland, nor think he is a genius, so he does not try to find out more while Strickland is alive.