“The ants and the grasshopper” is a beautifully written short fiction piece that plays around with the structure and ending of the classic Aesop fable: the ants who prepare for winter, and the grasshopper who does not.
I think there’s often a gap between how one thinks through the implications that a certain decision process would have on various difficult situations in the abstract, and how one actually feels while following through (or witnessing others follow through). It’s pretty easy to point at that gap’s existence, but pretty hard to reason well about that gap without being able to tangibly feel it. Fiction can do exactly that, but it’s hard to find a fiction piece that executes on that goal well without turning to heavy-handed cliches. For me, “The ants and the grasshopper” succeeded.
“The ants and the grasshopper” is a beautifully written short fiction piece that plays around with the structure and ending of the classic Aesop fable: the ants who prepare for winter, and the grasshopper who does not.
I think there’s often a gap between how one thinks through the implications that a certain decision process would have on various difficult situations in the abstract, and how one actually feels while following through (or witnessing others follow through). It’s pretty easy to point at that gap’s existence, but pretty hard to reason well about that gap without being able to tangibly feel it. Fiction can do exactly that, but it’s hard to find a fiction piece that executes on that goal well without turning to heavy-handed cliches. For me, “The ants and the grasshopper” succeeded.