High school: a major transition in many teen’s lives that poses some confusing, yet important, questions. Who am I? Where do I belong? What am I going to do with my life? I was caught up in all of these questions, and quite frankly, life didn’t seem so simple or easy anymore. Day after day I would struggle with keeping everything in balance and worried about all of the little things. My life seemed to slowly slip up until I couldn’t seem to handle everything. I needed answers, and I needed them quickly.…
Teens all over the world face this issue everyday. Many people are not comfortable with being who they are because their in fear of being judged by people. It causes them to surround themselves with people who don’t even acknowledge their existence. In the book the main character Holden tries to get along with people but no one really becomes his friend. He chases after people he can't have. Holden got kicked out of school so he can’t go back there. He doesn't have that family background help…
The coach wanted to see how much he can handle. He is a freshman at Trinity High School. He had a confrontation with the school gang named The Vigils. The Vigils specialize in making the assignments of other students that have to complete. Jerry's friends known as The Goober gets an assignment from The Vigils.…
Children are irresponsible, messy, and careless. As children grow up, they tend to try to learn from their mistakes, and they mature. But, some people do not grow up mentally. In That was Then, This is Now, by S.E. Hinton, Bryon Douglas, who needs to go through his personal journey, has a friend, Mark, who is a tedious person who is endangering Bryon, and causes Bryon to make a life-changing decision in order to fully mature; I once had to go on a profound personal journey to adapt to middle school.…
Introduction In this book wars article I will be comparing two books. They are Balancing Act by Margaret Gurevich, and Losers Take All by David Klass. These books have a few similarities between them. One is that the main characters are of similar ages, they are both in high school. Another is that in the book, they both have a couple friends that always have their backs.…
During the year when Melba decides to integrate Central High School, she forges herself into a warrior. In this time period, African Americans are treated as second-class citizens. Melba believes African Americans should be treated equally, not as second class citizens. While she is at Central High School, she faced racism and discriminations; the segregationists tries to expel her in every possible way they can think of. In order to survive Central High School, Melba uses variety of “weapons” including courage, help from Danny and Link, and determination within herself.…
Michael Gerard Bauer dealt with a topic that relates to the age group I’m in now. “Don’t Call Me Ishmael” was written about teen hood: Bullying, coping, low self esteem, self consciousness, the list could go on and St Daniels College is the place where it all happens. Ishmael is a fourteen year old boy who goes through the problems that I see teens face every day. His mates are nonetheless social outcasts themselves. All the characters in Bauer’s book deals with their own individual problems.…
One hundred years from now I believe this book will be read as it contains most problems faced by incoming freshmen in high school. The book is well written and is fun to read as the main character, Scott Hudson employs literary uses while he writes in his journal to his unborn sibling, who he calls Smelly of his high school experiences. Every teenager faces problems while in high school and some of them are addressed in this book. The issues that are evident in this book are friendship issues, school issues, family dynamics, transition from childhood to adulthood, and actions have consequences.…
In the book I am reading this quarter, it discusses key topics happening in today’s society such as racism, equality, and other social issues ☺. In The Hate U Give, the main character Starr goes through a scarring experience of seeing her best friend Khalil get murdered. What happens after this incident will forever change the way Starr sees things, and messes with her emotional health. Starr also has to balance living in a “ghetto” neighborhood, and going to a private white school. This book takes you on an emotional journey through bereft and fortitude.…
Teens growing up in modern America face challenges daily that help them grow into a productive member of society. In the book, Edgewater Angels by Sandro Meallet, the story is set in the projects of San Pedro, California, a heavily gang influenced town that is a part of Los Angeles. The book exposes the youthfulness of Sunny Toomer, a mischievous teen always faced with the decision between right and wrong in a neighborhood where you can get jumped for walking on the wrong side of the street. Sunny is just trying to find a way out of this life-style he was born into. Not such an easy task when you grow up with a single mother who works hard to provide for her son, and a father who has met his son only a few times. Sunny and his friends face a lot of challenges throughout the novel and they always manage to find a way to weasel themselves out of it with the help of Sunny’s cleverness and ability to think on his feet. Sunny Toomer’s goal that he wishes to achieve is to get out of San Pedro and live a good life. Edgewater Angels is both heartwarming and exciting because where the author set the story (San Pedro), the use of the character Tom-Su, and Sunny Toomer’s library that he spends most of his free time.…
The over-educated, under-lived teen as a first-person narrator is a dangerous tool for any writer. Most fail because they cannot find or sustain a believable balance of ignorance and knowledge, bravado and self-centredness.…
The main idea of the book is that any kid can fit in in any situation. All you have to do is be yourself and you will make friends. When Junior goes to his new school at first he tries to be like them but he realizes that he can’t be and he makes friends by being funny and playing basketball real good. He gets respect for fighting. Also if bad things happen to you things will be OK after a while. For example in the book his dog dies and also his grandmother, his sister and his dad’s friend dies. Even though he gets real sad from going to all the funerals he just keeps going. He even laughs in the car when his sister dies. That shows no matter what you can keep going even if people in your life…
Energy is one of the single most important concepts to keep in mind when writing, it can make even the most insignificant occurrences interesting. Energy plays with the reader’s senses combining subject matter, leaps/ spacing and words into one to create a fascinating piece of work. “Good writers choose a topic they know a lot about—relationships, travel, growing up, bedrooms, hotels, restaurants, the synagogue on 42nd Street—and they trust that they will discover things about the topic as they work.” (Sellers 71) Rick Moody author of “Boys” has taken a relatable topic the process of growing up and has turned a thirty year frame into a condensed linear chronological format. Moody offers the reader a different view point, introduces repetition and the stressing of words creating a certain movement influencing the readers experience.…
It comes as no surprise to anyone that teenagers are sometimes naturally moody, angst-ridden, and emotional as they transition from childhood to adulthood. No one, that is, but teenagers. For adolescents such as myself, the shifting position that teenagers come to in these years is awkward at best, and painful at worst. The sudden responsibility and pressure thrust upon a teenager in the latter years of high school (and often before) is near impossible to easily adjust to, especially when there is no real preparation offered. When left at the confusing crossroads of a seemingly transitory crisis, teenagers are faced with serious internal and external conflicts, often manifest in manic-depressive and abusive tendencies, as displayed in Salinger’s…
In the futuristic world of Fahrenheit 451, Clarisse has fear toward teenagers her age, because “they kill each other”, six of her friends “have been shot in the last year” and “ten of them died in car wrecks”(Bradbury 30). In the early 2000’s there were very astonishing stories in which the youth was a part of. Clarisse’s grandfather remembers of a time when teenagers didn’t kill each other, but that time is becoming distant from us because the amount of deaths committed by teenagers is increasing. Soon generations will become like Fahrenheit 451 and run wild and kill everything in their path.…