Indeed, narratives are infinite in their variety, and we find them everywhere. There seems to be in all forms of human life a need to tell; storytelling is an elementary form of human communication and, independently of stratified language performance, it is a universal competence. By telling, people recall what has happened, put experience into sequence, find possible explanations for it, and play with the chain of events that shapes individual and social life. Story-telling involves intentional states that alleviate, or at least make familiar, events and feelings that confront ordinary everyday life.