In Obabakoak there is a discussion of the short story, what makse a good one.  The kind of stories that they tell are of the Maupassant or O'Henry variety.  Stories with a satisfying "click" at the end.  A good story is short, meaningful, and has a point.  "Finis coronat opus."  The ending crowns the work.  
The characters all converge at the end of the novel to the house of the "Uncle from Montevideo" for a story-telling marathon.  The uncle is like a character out of a 19th century novel, an indiano (a Spaniard who has been the Americas to make his fortune and has returned home) who advocates traditional story-telling.  But in a Borgesian framework.   
In class I told a story from an old film.  A man in Central Park is approached by a young girl.  They have a conversation.  She gives many details about where she lives, her name...  Later, the man goes to the address and finds out the girl died many years ago of a childhood illness.  I can't remember what movie that is from.  
I also told an old joke:  A priest and a rabbi go into a bar, and the bartender says, "What is this, some kind of joke?"
 
 
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