In Richard Connell’s thrilling short story “The Most Dangerous Game”, an uneasy mood is constructed by Rainsford’s illusive adventure on Ship Trap Island. Many moments in the short story help build up a feeling of uneasy, one being when Winston uses a simile to describe the evil of the atmosphere, saying that the air “ was actually poisonous”, and that he felt a “mental chill, a sort of sudden dread” when the ship neared the island (Connell 1). The author makes the reader feel uneasy by making just the atmosphere itself seem evil and dangerous with the simile comparing the air to something that kills and is to be avoided. Readers also naturally pick up the feeling of dread from Whitney, which significantly helps in building…
The book I read was titled Here There are Tigers, The Secret Air War in Laos, 1968-69. It was written by Reginald Hawthorn and is his personal experience as a Major in the Air Force. I wanted to know an Air Force pilot’s perspective since I read about so much bombing going on during the Vietnam War. He was an FAC (Forward Air Controller) and flew an O-2 single prop airplane during Vietnam from 1968-1969. Major Reginald Hathorn was an instructor at Laughlin Air Force Base when he got the call on Friday of January 1968 that he would have to leave his wife and two daughters to fight in Vietnam.…
This chapter explains different people’s perspectives of the Hmong people and the history of the Hmong. The Chinese people thought of Hmongs as dirty, barbaric humans. The Chinese people were not accepting of the Hmong and eventually the Hmong had enough of China and many Hmong migrated. Two very important traits of the Hmong that are expressed in this chapter are that they don’t like to take orders or to lose. The main point of this chapter is to give some background knowledge on who Hmongs are and why many of them migrated. The reason this chapter is called fish soup is because a Hmong boy is giving a presentation on how to make fish soup and spends all of his time explaining all the things you need to do before you make the soup then that actual recipe. This represents a lot about Hmong culture because it is said that if a Hmong tells a folktale he would begin with the very beginning of the world.…
Cracker is a German shepherd that helps out in the Vietnam. Dogs have very strong senses this dog is very smart and that is what they want him for. They use him to sniff out bombs, traps, and enemies or anything else they might have set up. All the platoons depend on this dog without Cracker they would not make it as far as they has more less be able to go home and see their family once again. Cracker alerts the platoons and his partner when there is a bomb or enemy’s so they have a heads up on what they are about to run into. Rick Hanski is coming to Vietnam and is about to take over Cracker and become his new owner but, he is not all that sure on how it will be he is very confused about what to do. He will be paired with Cracker, the German shepherd. They are not sure how well they will work together, Rich is not that big of a dog person but in order to make it they need to get to know each other and learn how to get along if they want to make it home to see their family one more time again.…
In Bich Minh Nguyen’s memoir, “Stealing Buddha’s Dinner,” she narrates her experiences growing up as a Vietnamese refugee in a predominantly white, conservative community of Grand Rapids Michigan, in effort to assimilate to the American culture. Emigrating from Vietnam and experiencing the new American culture, she desires to fit in and be accepted as an American when her ethnicity inevitable marks her as different, being colored Vietnamese and non-Christian Buddhist. Nguyen’s journey toward her self-realization and reconciliation can be traced through her complex relationship to food. Her self-discovery is genuinely embedded in her responses to the food she is exposed or wishes to have. Unfortunately, not all of her responses…
Rainsfordss passion for hunting is very evident within the story. He considered himself a hunter because he has traveled all around the world and wrote many books on hunting. He expresses his feelings for the sport during the story calling it the best sport in the world.…
PhD.Le, Thanh Thi, ed. "Pocahontas Incident." American Literature. Ho Chi Minh: Education, 2007. 42-44. Print.…
The Vietnam War was a long costly armed conflict that wounded the U.S. The communist regime of North Vietnam was a war fought by the Viet Cong against South Vietnam and its principal ally, the United States. The war was increasingly unpopular at home it ended with the withdrawal of U.S. forces. More than 3 million people, including 58,000 Americans, were killed in the conflict. Tim O’Brien the author of “The Things They Carried” is book that recounts his own experience in the Vietnam War and allows him to give a vivid description on the war. He enters the war as scared young man. The war leaves a guilt-ridden middle-aged man who tells stories about Vietnam in order to cope with his painful memories. O’Brien uses imagery and symbolism in order to…
3. The methods the author illustrates about how African Americans have their own cuisine is that there are many foods they had came up with. For example, Fried chicken, grits, mustard greens, pig feet,…
This paper helped me grow as a writer. I found that I have a real strength in my diction, but I'm weaker in writing introduction and conclusion paragraphs. Knowing my strengths and weaknesses will help me improve myself in my academic future and grow as a person. My knowledge on the Vietnam War has vastly expanded and knowing this piece of history will help me make political decisions in the future. My isearch paper started as a struggle, I became very ill in the beginning of the writing process. Nevertheless, I believe that my isearch is well written and I am satisfied with the majority of my research paper. If I could change one thing about my isearch process, I would have been more organized in the beginning which would put me on the right…
Time Magazine’s Vietnam Collection: Vietnam 15 Years Later. (1990). Retrieved October 1, 2011, from http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,969996,00.html.…
The story by Tim O’Brien shows how the soldiers are themselves and can also be serious. O’Brien also sees how Vietnam changes the soldiers and how they see the world now. There will be people that will ask if it’s true or not true they can asks what happened. There can be different ways to tell a story but they can ask what happen. O’Brien would know which story he really believes. O’Brien will give use by looking at Rat’s point of view, and Sanders point of view of Lemon death and how Rat copes with a letter. Here are three points’ that will go with O’Brien story the history, biography and literary criticism.…
When reading selected short stories, novels, and plays from any literary time period, there is always a number of patterns that can be spotted in the subject matter that the writers of the time choose to discuss in their stories. During what is generally referred to as the “post-modern” literary movement, which is usually considered to be from after the Second World War until present day, an obvious subject is the Vietnam War. There have been many different interpretations of this event through the years. Many of the big writers who covered the Vietnam War had different ways of telling the story but the most successful ones told the stories subjectively rather than objectively. Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried and Michael Herr’s Dispatches share styles that are similar in the way that they both focus on telling their stories in a way that makes war seem terrible and not inspiring unlike the war time writers of the past, but they also have some differences in how they went about structuring their stories.…
Tim O’Brien’s Vietnam novel The Things They Carried was written in many respects to reflect real events and while we soon come to the realization that the actual event is in the end irrelevant, these events still provide a vital backdrop for the reader to initially absorb then realize that they don’t actually matter. The Things They Carried is not a text book nor in any respects is it an accurate historical account, it is a collection of memories, feelings and actions and with O’Brien staying clear of stereotypical themes such as heroism and bravery we are presented with a more compelling, realistic and appropriate view of an ambiguous war fought by young and unsure men. With realism being the truth and truth being a feeling Tim O’Brien successfully conveys every theme major or minor leaving us simply with one overwhelming feeling of uncertainty. As he constantly backtracks, re-writes and retells stories the facts become more and more distorted but the truth and relevance of all the stories are stronger with every page you read. While it is important to know that the soldiers were fighting a war with unthinkable consequences the fact will always remain that whether someone died in 1968 in Vietnam or 1980 in New York the feelings will always be the same and in the end with time distorted facts the only truth is the felling you have.…
Basically identify the dominant idea but then use a reading strategy to identify the underlying meaning and either accept it or reject it.…