Preview

Ambler

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
536 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Ambler
June was born November 8th, in a small town in Philadelphia called Ambler. Her parents Michael and Mary were both born and raised in Ambler, and they decided to have June in 1921. 19 years ago, a baby girl with vibrant green eyes and rosy cheeks was born. She had a unique laugh and eyelashes that reached out the sides of her eyes. Four years later they had her sister, Ann who had hazel eyes and chocolate brown hair. They grew up as best friends, but the older they got the more different they became. June was an artist. Since the age of three she had been painting on her walls while her father, a pianist was playing his originals on the piano. She was drawn to cool tones. Purples, blues and dark greys were her favorite. She attended public schooling …show more content…
Against the KKK, women's suffrage and equal rights. She would march across the tiny town of Ambler expressing her opinion. Her dad would often worry that she would be looked down upon by the town for her strong views and differences. June did not mind, she was independent and strong. When she turned 19 she decided to set out and see the world for herself. Anna was still at home keeping her father company and caring for him as he grew older. June went to the city of New York where urbanization was on an extreme rise. She showed her favorite pieces to different galleries and began to make profit from doing so.Currently she is living in a small apartment located a few blocks from Wall Street. She continues to put on art shows and she just adores what she does. Sometimes she will feel sadness and hurt from previous trauma but she said that’s what fuels her. It ignites a fire within her that helps her create pieces beyond thought. She also works a night shift at a restaurant around the corner from her home. She’s financially steady and emotionally healing. She stays in close contact with her sister Ana who is now a grade school teacher in Ambler, and her father whom is still going strong.She makes sure to visit them frequently but the town reminds her of her mother and sets her in a slump.Things in the world are changing immensely but June loves change. She is optimistic and believes that change is a

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    It’s like going to a restaurant and not knowing what you want to order. Once you come across the item that makes your mouth water, you find yourself not being able to leave until you are satisfied and know that this was something that you will remember forever. The theme of “June Birthing” by Joyce Carol Oates is that sometimes in life chance events can change someone’s life.…

    • 496 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This graphic novel written by Lisa Chen consists of different chapters that provide insight on several periods of her life, that impact and shape her into the person she is today. The Lead Up is a chapter that recounts the events that occur before her stepmother and father divorce. The chapter depicts how these events had significantly affected her and how that has caused her to be the emotionally sensitive yet resilient and independent teenager she is today after experiencing these hardships. It is written after reading Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis, to gain insight on the writing process.…

    • 258 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Raeanne and Kaeleigh Gardella are the teenage daughters of two successful parents: their father, Raymond, is a district-court judge and their mother, Kay, is a successful woman politician. While Kaeleigh acts as a typical school student that is involved in a school play, her identical twin sister, Raeanne, is the opposite. Raeanne spends most of her free time with her drug dealer, smoking pot, drinking and being extremely promiscuous. At home, both girls drink their father’s alcohol, and take his prescribed oxy-contin but still manage to keep their lives completely separate from each other. Raeanne begs for her father’s love and affection, while Kaeleigh gets too much of it; Kaeleigh is raped by her father regularly and is afraid to seek help……

    • 604 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jeannie Hardy Biography

    • 1012 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Born on October 19, 1945, in Texas, Jeannie Riley’s earliest memory was living in a house with no foundation. As a child, she already had dreams of becoming big in Nashville so she could give her parents a better life. While other young girls were learning how to do household chores, Jeannie spent her time teaching herself about country music and singing. Her uncle, Johnny Moore, was a part of a country singing band and he helped…

    • 1012 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Marian Anderson credits her aunt Mary for influencing her as the reason why she pursued a music career. At that age of twelve, Marian’s father was struck on the head at work at the Reading Terminal, and a few weeks before Christmas in 1909, he died at age 24. After the death of her father Marian her mother and her two sisters went to live in their father’s parents’ house Grandpa Benjamin and grandma Isabella. Marian’s grandfather was born a slave and had been emancipated in the 1860s. He and Marian were very close.…

    • 996 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “…It’s as if she’s been walking on a wire, trying to keep her balance, and now, for the first time, she is on solid ground.“ (259). As Molly learns Vivian's stories can help her on how she can handle difficult situations in her life, Molly understands that she and Vivian may be orphans and both have been moved from place to place, it wasn’t always their faults. Molly takes on the job at Vivian's to fulfill 50 hours of community service. She gains so much more than what she thought she would through the experience. Molly sees the comparisons between her life and Vivian's. Vivian’s story helps Molly; the story gives Molly hope. It allows her not to look at the past and have it defines her as a…

    • 517 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    She is fighting to find acceptance where she can, whether that be in Naxos, Chicago, New York City and Harlem, Copenhagen, or even in Alabama. I see her suffering from dysthymia which is a functional level of depression, but she is border line to having a form of bipolar disorder. She has times where she feels great, as she comes down from those highs, she feels mad and anxious, most of the time due to someone judging her for some reason. She always finds a reason to become angry and this brings her down into a low in which she wants to find a way to become happy again. I see that when she has this religious vision and marries the reverend that she is in a high mood and then she comes down from that and this causes her to have a form of psychosis begin by the ending of the…

    • 1995 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    -----was always a cheerful person. She was born in Fresno on March 1, 1996. Recently she had graduated from ____high school, and had only begun college. As a child, she grew a passion for music. During middle school she tried out for the clarinet and she got the position to play. Although she enjoyed the clarinet, she wanted a challenge and decided to go for the flute during high school. In the summer she couldn’t let go of a book because she was glued to it. Even though she was not athletic, she loved volleyball.…

    • 925 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Looking for Alibrandi

    • 1883 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Good Morning Good Afternoon Miss McCarthy and class. I will be discussing the novel Looking for Alibrandi by Melina Marchetta. The novel, Looking for Alibrandi is charged with emotional energy. Throughout the novel it shows cultural differences and a lack of communication and understanding between the family. This book is written as both a social and cultural analysis of Josephine Alibrandi’s life,, Josephine Alibrandi is 17 years old and comes from third generation Italian Australian. She feels caught in a claustrophobic trap between family lives obsessed with tradition, a strict disciplined Catholic school and trying to find herself and her position as a teenage girl. Throughout the novel Josie is constantly changing her views on people, and experiences her share of emotional upheaveful as she comes to realize that a perfect world consists of more than just gorgeous hairstyles, rich boyfriends and social privileges. It is a common representation throughout the novel that Josie Alibrandi is a selfish and egotistical girl whose internal angst and whose conflict with others all stemmed from her expectations that others should conform to meet her needs. This can be seen in her interactions with her close family members Christina, Nonna and Michael. She also selfish towards her friends John and Jacob.…

    • 1883 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bad Girls Don't Die

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Alexis Warren has pink hair and green eyes. The only thing Alexis really cares about is photography. The young high school student’s life changes when Kasey, Alexis’s little sister, is acting stranger than ever. Her blue eyes go green when she’s mad, she uses old-fashioned language, and she even loses track of chunks of time, claiming to know nothing about her strange behavior. Their old house is changing, too. Doors open and close by themselves, water boils on the…

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Blue Against White

    • 605 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Lena does not want to be different anymore. She decides to go to the city and there she goes to school. Hoping for a new life and no more standing out, Lena easily gets disappointed. She learns that even if you move to a place with a higher population, you can still be alone. After coming to terms with herself and realizing that the city is not what she expected, Lena goes back to the reserve. She was happy to return to her roots. They are the one place you are always welcome to come back to. As she was coming home she was glad to see the dogs running freely in the reserve and the blue door that she despised all her life had now shown her a sign of home and safety.…

    • 605 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    April Raintree is a twenty-four-year old Métis woman, and she tells a story about herself and her younger sister Cheryl’s lives. As small children, April and Cheryl are taken away from their alcoholic parents and are put into different foster families, where they have different experiences. Cheryl is encouraged to be proud of her Native ancestry by the Macadam’s family and develops a strong and confident identity. April on the other hand is sent to live with the DeRossier family. She suffers through abuse and discrimination against her Métis heritage, which makes her feel a deep shame of belonging to the Métis people and she wishes to lead a ‘white’ life.…

    • 2260 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Color Purple Essay

    • 1061 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Celie is inspired by her sister’s independence, determination and perseverance in Africa among foreign people whom Nettie cares about deeply. Celie saw the impact that a woman could have on others and felt empowered to overcome the abuse she experiences. Nettie is someone that Celie tries to shelter from the physical and sexual abuse of their father. It is also Nettie who Celie looks to for education when her father pulls her out of school and for support when she moves in with Mr. where she was abused by him and his children. When Nettie runs away, Mr. hides the letters sent to Celie thereby cutting off the sister’s communication, which left them heartbroken. “I sit here in this big empty house by myself trying to sew, but what good is sewing gon do? What good is anything? Being seem like a awful strain.” (Walker 262). Upon discovering Nettie’s letters, Celie finds a new desire to live because her sister was alive. Nettie also serves as Celie’s only link to her children. Nettie gives Celie pride in her children who were intelligent and prosperous in Africa, which gives Celie newfound confidence. All her life, Nettie was the one who always supported and loved Celie but when Celie wasn’t receiving her letters, she looked to Sophia for inspiration.…

    • 1061 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Pink Floyd and the Wall

    • 1576 Words
    • 7 Pages

    From the outset, Pink's life revolves around an abyss of loss and isolation. Born to a war-ravaged nation that takes his father's life in the name of "duty," and an overprotective mother who lavishes equal measures of her love and phobias onto her son, Pink chooses to build a mental wall between himself and the rest of the world so that he can live in a constant, alienated equilibrium free from life's physical and emotional troubles. Every incident that causes Pink pain is yet another brick in his ever-growing wall: a fatherless childhood, a domineering mother, a country whose king signs his father's death certificate with a rubber stamp, the superficiality of stardom, an estranged marriage, even the very drugs he turns to in order to find release. As his wall nears completion, each brick further closing him off from the rest of the world, Pink spirals into a void of insanity, cementing in place the final brick in the wall. Yet the minute it is complete, Pink begins to realize the adverse effects of total mental isolation, helplessly watching as his fragmented psyche coalesces into the very dictatorial persona that antagonized the world during World War II, scarred his nation, killed his father, and thereby defiled his own life from birth. Culminating in a mental trial as theatrically rich as the greatest stage shows, the…

    • 1576 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Rita: Rita is a working-class, twenty-six-year-old hairdresser who has taken the decisive step of enrolling on a literature course at the Open University. It has been a difficult decision as it means that she has to break away from the restrictions imposed on her by her husband and by the community in which she lives and works. Indeed, Rita's choice is a stark one: it is between starting a family, which Denny wants, or studying. In deciding to study and become more educated and culturally aware, Rita changes her life completely. She gradually becomes absorbed by culture and literature. It is only after her flatmate attempts suicide that she begins to realise that art and literature cannot provide all the answers. However, she decides to continue as a student and finally passes her examination.…

    • 305 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays