A LETTER TO GOD
"A Letter to God" by G.L. Fuentes is a story about
Lencho, a poor farmer with unwavering faith in
God. After a hailstorm destroys his crops, Lencho
writes a letter to God asking for 100 pesos. The
kind postmaster and his staff, moved by his faith,
gather 70 pesos, but Lencho suspects them of
stealing the rest.
Key Details:
, Lencho's Faith: Lencho is a simple man who
believes God will not let his family starve.
The Disaster: A violent hailstorm destroys all of
Lencho’s cornfield, threatening his livelihood.
The Request: He writes to God requesting \(100\)
pesos to sow his field again.
The Irony: The postmaster and employees collect
70 pesos (a "bunch of crooks" to Lencho) to help
him. When Lencho receives less than requested, he
angrily calls them thieves in a second letter,
completely trusting the divine and distrusting
humans.
Theme: The story focuses on unwavering faith and
irony, highlighting how humanity can sometimes
go unappreciated
"A Letter to God" by G.L. Fuentes features a
hopeful, ironic, and intensely faithful tone,
tracing a farmer's desperate plea to the divine. The
narrative hinges on dramatic irony—where the
reader understands the kindness of the postmaster
while Lencho suspects him of theft—combined with
profound irony regarding faith.
Hopeful/Devout: Initially, the tone is filled with
optimism and absolute faith as Lencho pleads for
his crops.
"A Letter to God" by G.L. Fuentes is a story about
Lencho, a poor farmer with unwavering faith in
God. After a hailstorm destroys his crops, Lencho
writes a letter to God asking for 100 pesos. The
kind postmaster and his staff, moved by his faith,
gather 70 pesos, but Lencho suspects them of
stealing the rest.
Key Details:
, Lencho's Faith: Lencho is a simple man who
believes God will not let his family starve.
The Disaster: A violent hailstorm destroys all of
Lencho’s cornfield, threatening his livelihood.
The Request: He writes to God requesting \(100\)
pesos to sow his field again.
The Irony: The postmaster and employees collect
70 pesos (a "bunch of crooks" to Lencho) to help
him. When Lencho receives less than requested, he
angrily calls them thieves in a second letter,
completely trusting the divine and distrusting
humans.
Theme: The story focuses on unwavering faith and
irony, highlighting how humanity can sometimes
go unappreciated
"A Letter to God" by G.L. Fuentes features a
hopeful, ironic, and intensely faithful tone,
tracing a farmer's desperate plea to the divine. The
narrative hinges on dramatic irony—where the
reader understands the kindness of the postmaster
while Lencho suspects him of theft—combined with
profound irony regarding faith.
Hopeful/Devout: Initially, the tone is filled with
optimism and absolute faith as Lencho pleads for
his crops.