Russian Roulette: The True Unreliable Narrator

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Russian Roulette; The True Unreliable Narrator It is undeniable that murderers can not be trusted, even more so when they seem to be amnesiacs; “Strawberry Spring” by Stephen King is a story that has a protagonist with exactly those characteristics. Spotty memory and being a narrator-slash-murderer at the same time while hiding it from the reader are grounds for Springheel Jack to be the most unreliable narrator. It is common knowledge that criminals can not be trusted, especially murderers. The Caretaker from “The Tell-Tale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe is one prime example. He murders the old man he is taking care of simply because of his eye; “Whenever it fell upon me, my blood ran cold. I made up my mind to take the life of the old man,” (Poe …show more content…

Sprinheel Jack, on the other hand, does not have any observable motives for murdering the people he does, and there is no rationale behind his behavior. Additionally, Springheel Jack says something strange, “I had my own car on campus, and I took six people downstate with me,” (King 7). It can be assumed that those six people are the people that Springheel Jack has so far killed, and it is many more than the kill count of the Caretaker. One homicide compared to six is a vast difference, and so is the reliability, The Caretaker narrates his murder to the reader, but Springheel Jack does not, making him all the more unreliable. Being mentally ill has a significant impact on the ability to narrate actual events that take place instead of distorting them. A disorder that occurs after childbirth called postpartum elicits distorted perceptions and hallucinations of its victims, and one such victim is Jane from “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Jane is a woman suffering from postpartum, and she becomes obsessed with the wallpaper in her and her husband's current home, often citing delusional descriptions of

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