Narrative Essay Examples: Narrative Essays: To Tell A Story
Narrative Essay Examples: Narrative Essays: To Tell A Story
Narrative Essay Examples: Narrative Essays: To Tell A Story
In a narrative essay you tell a story, but you also make a point. So, it is like a story told for a reason.
The Climb
This excerpt from the climb also captures your attention right away by creating a sense of mystery.
The reader announces that he or she has "this fear" and you want to read on to see what that fear is.
“I have this fear. It causes my legs to shake. I break out in a cold sweat. I start jabbering
to anyone who is nearby. As thoughts of certain death run through my mind, the world
appears a precious, treasured place. I imagine my own funeral, then shrink back at the
implications of where my thoughts are taking me. My stomach feels strange. My palms
are clammy. I am terrified of heights.Of course, it’s not really a fear of being in a high
place. Rather, it is the view of a long way to fall, of rocks far below me and no firm wall
between me and the edge. My sense of security is screamingly absent. There are no
guardrails, flimsy though I picture them, or other safety devices. I can rely only on my
own surefootedness—or lack thereof.”
Disney Land
The following narrative essay involves a parent musing about taking her kids to Disney Land.
“It was a hot sunny day, when I finally took my kids to the Disney Land. My son Matthew
and my daughter Audra endlessly asked me to show them the dream land of many
children with Mickey Mouse and Snow-white walking by and arousing a huge portion of
emotions. Somehow these fairy tale creatures can make children happy without such
“small” presents as $100 Lego or a Barby’s house in 6 rooms and garden furniture.
Therefore, I thought that Disney Land was a good invention for loving parents.”
Playground Memory
The first excerpt from, “Playground Memory”, has very good sensory details.
“Looking back on a childhood filled with events and memories, I find it rather difficult to
pick on that leaves me with the fabled “warm and fuzzy feelings.” As the daughter of an
Air Force Major, I had the pleasure of traveling across America in many moving trips. I
have visited the monstrous trees of the Sequoia National Forest, stood on the edge of
the Grande Canyon and have jumped on the beds at Caesar’s Palace in Lake Tahoe.
However, I have discovered that when reflecting on my childhood, it is not the trips that
come to mind, instead there are details from everyday doings; a deck of cards, a silver
bank or an ice cream flavor. One memory that comes to mind belongs to a day of no
particular importance. It was late in the fall in Merced, California on the playground of
my old elementary school; an overcast day with the wind blowing strong. I stood on the
blacktop, pulling my hoodie over my ears. The wind was causing miniature tornados; we
called them “dirt devils”, to swarm around me.”
Christmas Cookies
The second of the two narrative essay examples is an excerpt from “Christmas Cookies.”
“Although I have grown up to be entirely inept at the art of cooking, as to make even the
most wretched chef ridicule my sad baking attempts, my childhood would have
indicated otherwise; I was always on the countertop next to my mother’s cooking bowl,
adding and mixing ingredients that would doubtlessly create a delicious food. When I
was younger, cooking came intrinsically with the holiday season, which made that time
of year the prime occasion for me to unite with ounces and ounces of satin dark
chocolate, various other messy and gooey ingredients, numerous cooking utensils, and
the assistance of my mother to cook what would soon be an edible masterpiece. The
most memorable of the holiday works of art were our Chocolate Crinkle Cookies, which
my mother and I first made when I was about six and are now made annually.”