The narrator, himself a Jew, used his friend's name to escape from occupied Europe.
The narrator uses a different language to describe the place.
It is a crime story in which the narrator has apparently read Chambers' book, and uses the phrase to describe one of the other characters.
In it, the narrator uses a roller coaster as a metaphor for life.
In both situations, the narrator uses mountains as a metaphor for the struggles each person faces.
The characters and narrators use speech or thought bubbles to express verbal language.
MacInnes has the narrator use a very stylised form of speech.
The narrator uses it to illustrate his father's distasteful "reading" habits.
The narrator of the poem uses these words in a different manner:
Funny, though, the narrator never actually uses the term "shard."