A Gathering of Old Men | Style
Structure and Point of View
The novel is divided into twenty short chapters or segments, each of which is narrated in the first person. There are fifteen different narrators, ten black and five white (this is fewer than the number of chapters because Lou Dimes narrates four chapters, and Snookum and Sully two each). Dimes is given four chapters probably because Gaines thought him well suited, as a journalist, to report on events. Dimes supplies much objective information, since he adopts a fairly neutral stance, favoring neither the old men nor Mapes. The segments are also...
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- A Gathering of Old Men: Introduction
- A Gathering of Old Men: Summary
- A Gathering of Old Men: Ernest J. Gaines Biography
- A Gathering of Old Men: Characters
- A Gathering of Old Men: Themes
- A Gathering of Old Men: Style
- A Gathering of Old Men: Historical Context
- A Gathering of Old Men: Critical Overview
- A Gathering of Old Men: Essays and Criticism
- A Gathering of Old Men: Compare and Contrast
- A Gathering of Old Men: Topics for Further Study
- A Gathering of Old Men: Media Adaptations
- A Gathering of Old Men: What Do I Read Next?
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