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  1. Mitty is the defendant in a murder trial. He remains calm in the face of an aggressive district attorney. Instead of denying his skill with firearms, Mitty brags about his expertise. This upsets his lawyer and throws the courtroom into chaos. A young woman falls into Mitty’s arms, and he defends her from the district attorney.

  2. The story does not mention the state, but readers can infer that it is Connecticut. In the 1930s, Thurber lived in Newton, Connecticut, less than 20 miles from Waterbury, also in Connecticut; so, it seems like a natural, real-world setting. However, the setting could be almost any town. The places in Mitty’s Waterbury are commonplace and dull ...

  3. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. By James Thurber. March 11, 1939. Illustration by Rebekka Dunlap. “We’re going through!”. The Commander’s voice was like thin ice breaking. He wore his ...

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  5. Interview with a Lemming. " The Secret Life of Walter Mitty " (1939) is a short story by James Thurber. The most famous of Thurber's stories, [1] it first appeared in The New Yorker on March 18, 1939, and was first collected in his book My World and Welcome to It ( Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1942 ). [2] It has since been reprinted in James ...

  6. Nancy Carlsson-Paige is a professor of early childhood education at Lesley University in Cambridge, Massachusetts where she has trained teachers for more than thirty years and was a founder of the University’s Center for Peaceable Schools. Since the mid-1980’s, she has written and spoken extensively about the impact that violence and ...

  7. Full Title: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. When Written: 1939. Where Written: Connecticut. When Published: March 18, 1939, in The New Yorker; collected in My World—and Welcome To It (1942) Literary Period: Modernism. Genre: Short Story/Humor. Setting: Waterbury, Connecticut, around the winter of 1938-1939.

  8. Throughout the story, Walter dreams up several heroic personae he has created for himself. These characters are a stark contrast to Mitty's own, real-life identity. In reality, Mitty is weak, passive, and constantly nagged by his wife, while in his daydreams, he is daring, heroic, tough, and admired by women.

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