Department of English

Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University


 

Reunion

(1962)


John Cheever

(May 27, 1912 – June 18, 1982)

 

 

"Reunion" Notes

This short story was first published in The New Yorker in 1962.

 

Grand Central Station: or Grand Central is a common name for Grand Central Terminal, the busiest railway station in New York City and an iconic landmark since its completion in 1913.





Adirondacks:

the Cape:

Kellner:

Garçon: French for "boy"; also used to call waiters

Cameriere:

chop-chop: slang for quickly

Beefeater Gibsons: A Gibson is a kind of martini, a cocktail. When made using Beefeater gin, it's called a Beefeater Gibson.

Master of the hounds: the conductor of a foxhunt



  • foxhunting (Encyclopædia Britannica)
    the chase of a fox by horsemen with a pack of hounds. In England, the home of the sport, foxhunting dates from at least the 15th century. In its inception, it was probably an adjunct to stag and hare hunting, with the same hounds used to chase each quarry.
    [...]
    The sport often followed wherever the British Empire took root. Traditional procedure is still observed and the proper kit (clothing) worn. A fox hunt is conducted by the master, and, in theory, all who take part in it do so at the master’s invitation, even when they pay for the privilege. The hounds, generally 20 to 30 couples (matched pairs), are controlled by the huntsman, who may be the master but is generally the senior paid servant of the hunt. Two or three whippers-in assist in reconnaissance and in keeping the hounds together as a pack. Master, huntsman, and whippers-in take precedence over all other riders to hounds. The huntsman controls hounds by voice, his or her calls being known as cheers, and by a horn—a copper tube about 8 inches (20 cm) long that produces two notes of great carrying and penetrating quality.
    [...]
    The foxhunting uniform is usually a scarlet (“pink”) coat with a white stock (cravat) and black velvet cap for the master, huntsman, and whippers-in. Followers of sufficient prestige are invited to wear scarlet, with the individual buttons of the hunt, and a top hat (the velvet cap being strictly the prerogative of those actively engaged in the control of hounds, though by modern usage women may also wear it). Other followers wear black coats, with top hats or bowlers.
  • "Master," Fox Hunting Terms, Harvard Fox Hounds
    This almost always refers to the Master of Fox Hounds (MFH), the person responsible for the hunting and the organization of the country. As long as you are in the hunt field, the Master’s word is “law”. At the meet, this is the person in charge and responsible for the entire proceedings. The MFH is the host, making sure everyone is having a good day, and the chief of protocol, making sure rules and traditions are upheld, and the safety officer, making sure everyone is under control and behaving courteously and kindly.
  • Anthony Trollope, "The Master of Hounds," Hunting Sketches (1865)


Tallyho:

domestic: house servant

Buon giorno: in Italian, literally, "good day"; used for morning and early afternoon

Per favore...poco vermut: in Italian, literally, "Please, may we have two American cocktails, strong, strong. A lot of gin, a little vermouth."

Vogliamo...Subito: in Italian, literally, "We want two American cocktails. Immediately."

Vada all'inferno: Italian, "go to hell"

yellow journalism: a derogatory term used to refer to reporting that aims to sell with exciting language and details rather than to provide factual information or a responsible, thoughtful, well-researched story

get a rise out of: to make someone angry 





 

      

Study Questions

  • Compare the narrator's references to his father at the beginning of the story and at the end. What insights about the son and the father do the descriptions give? How does the forthcoming language of the beginning convey a different feeling and attitude toward the father from the stunted and withheld ending? For example, what do the expressive "my flesh and blood," "He was a big, good-looking man," or "I was terribly happy to see him again" reveal about the speaker? By contrast, what does the matter-of-fact final sentence "'Goodbye, Daddy,' I said, and I went down the stairs and got my train, and that was the last time I saw my father" reveal about his emotions?

  • What effect do the father's interactions with waiters at various restaurants have on his image initially created by the son-narrator's anticipation of him?

  • The closing phrase is almost a repeat of the beginning phrase of the story. How differently does "and that was the last time I saw my father" sound compared to the beginning? What meaning(s) does it have after the witnessed reunion that it did not have when the story opened? What different moods or tones do the two practically identical phrases carry in their different positions in the narrative?
  • What does the father's behavior at the various dining establishments say about the kind of father he is? In what ways does his interaction with the different restaurant clerks speak about his relationship with his son?
  • Though the story is told in the first person from the point of view of the son, we do not get his direct quote until the end of the work. Why do you think the son is voiceless throughout most of the story even though this reunion is supposed to be about him and his father, meeting, catching up with each other, getting to know one another?
  • Look up the word "tallyho" in a good dictionary like Merriam-Webster, American Heritage, or Oxford. How does its meaning explain the father's usage of the phrase "Master of the hounds" and the restaurant's decor and staff uniform?

 

 

Sample Student Responses to John Cheever's "Reunion" 


 

Study Question

 

Response 1:

 

 

 

 

 

Student Name

2202234 Introduction to the Study of English Literature

Acharn Sorn Nangsue

June 21, 2010

Reading Response 1

  

Title

 

Text.

 

 

 

 

 

            

 


 

 


Links

 


Media


  • Blake Bailey on John Cheever, The Center for Fiction (2011 lecture by Cheever's biographer; sound not too good)

  • Celebrating The Stories of John Cheever (2012; video clips of introduction, readings and commentary by three writers; sound not good)


 


John Cheever

 



 

Reference

Cheever, John. "Reunion." The New Yorker. 27 October 1962. 45.



Further Reading

Cheever, Benjamin, ed. The Letters of John Cheever. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988. Print.

    [CL 813.52 C515L]


Cheever, John. The Enormous Radio and Other Stories. New York: Harper and Row, 1965. Print.

    [CL C515E]


Cheever, John. The Stories of John Cheever. New York: Knopf, 1996. Print.

    [IIC American Studies 813.5 CS]


Cheever, John. Thirteen Uncollected Stories by John Cheever. Ed. Franklin H. Dennnis. Chicago: Academy Chicago, 1994. Print.

    [Arts Library 81]


Donaldson, Scott. John Cheever: A Biography. New York: Random House, 1988. Print.

    [Arts Library PS3505.H6428Z64 D676J 1988]





 


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Last updated July 30, 2013