Billie Jo is the main character in the book. She was named Billie Jo by her father because he really wanted a girl. She is an only child and loves to play the piano. She has a mother named Polly, who has been pretty tired out by life on the farm. She is a great cook, a very good pianist, and is pregnant. Her father's name is Bayard. He is a hard working farmer, but he is somewhat stubborn, never wanting advice from anyone. The story takes place in the 1930's, in the panhandle of Oklahoma on a farm in Joyce City, but they are going through a very hard time because they are living through the Dust Bowl.…
“That wolf cries every single night. It’s lost. We’re lost too, son. We ain’t cut out for this.” the one-armed father bemoans as he recollects the maternal death of his exuberant, fair-skinned wife. Her cries for helps, which slipped past the confines of her clenched teeth, cemented her legacy and her life. Cassius, a being who never meant any member of his true family, found only one source of reciprocated love and it emanated from one being- Clara, his wife. Following her death, everyday has been an opportunity to escape the confines of Charleston, South Carolina.…
This novel touches people's hearts. Patrick's two friends, Liam and Aidan, lost their mother due to cancer. Every night they howled at the moon with their father. It just makes them feel better about themselves. Patrick and his friends thought that his father had died in an accident or something bad happened to him while he was…
They walked along the beach with a type of hop in their step. She stepped over the crashing water, he left marks in the visible sand. His footprints washed away as the sand was pulled back and he looked out at the water. He looked at his daughter. She would be leaving in just three short weeks, and he had no other person to fill in the loneliness of his life.…
Family: One of the main ideas in the novel is family. In the novel, Carl and Harley are desert by their family and are forced to move in with their aunt who doesn’t care that the three of them share a bond with each other. Also, at their new home Carl and Harley are often detested because of what had happened in the past with their grandfather so another situation regarding their family has landed the brothers into another dilemma. As the story progresses, Carl regains the trust of the townspeople in Carl and Harley and they lose the label of the Matt Family being a bunch of troublemakers and by the end of the novel Carl and Harley are able to get their lives back by joining a new family.…
Tom is the son of Amanda. Laura is the daughter of Amanda. Laura is Tom’s OLDER sister. Jim O’Connor works with Tom. Amanda was abandoned by her husband years ago. No one has a spouse. Tom supplies money for the family working for a show warehouse, but aspires to be a poet. Lower-middle class status.…
The statement “While A Kestrel for a Knave begins with a sense of hope, it soon becomes clear that the novel and film are both ultimately about Billy’s defeat.” is one that I agree with. It's explores the theme of hope in both a positive and negative manner. The audience learns that hope can be nurtured through the support of adults and also when an individual has a goal they wish to attain. Yet, it's abolished when a teenager is succumbed to despair due to not being rendered with support, and shows the harsh reality for many teenagers dwelling in poverty whereby they experience the absence of hope. I believe this book resonates with teenagers in a contemporary society, as adults can hinder or encourage teenagers dealing with adversities such as bullying, poverty, or family abuse. Also, it suggests that due to the perils of life, teenagers may be deprived of hope when they realise that regardless of their goals and determination, they may never succeed. As evident in the murder of the Kestral which was Billie's only source of hope despite adversities. The statement “While A Kestrel for a Knave begins with a sense of hope, it soon becomes clear that the novel and film are both ultimately about Billy’s defeat.” is one that I agree with. It's explores the theme of hope in both a positive and negative manner. The audience learns that hope can be nurtured through the support of adults and also when an individual has a goal they wish to attain. Yet, it's abolished when a teenager is succumbed to despair due to not being rendered with support, and shows the harsh reality for many teenagers dwelling in poverty whereby they experience the absence of hope. I believe this book resonates with teenagers in a contemporary society, as adults can hinder or encourage teenagers dealing with adversities such as bullying, poverty, or family abuse. Also, it suggests that due to the perils of life, teenagers may be deprived of hope when they realise that regardless of their goals and…
He soon meets a girl who he eventually discovers is just stringing him along. After years of not seeing her and hearing the news of the girl’s sad fate, he still realizes that he still has some love left for her. At the center of story are then themes of class and society and the negative side of American Dream. These two themes are mainly symbolized by the characters of the story.…
The theme of people longing for love can be seen throughout the novel through the Bergen Family. Bette Greene has a way with words while she tells the tale of this small town, Jewish family, and how Patty Bergen hides a German POW. Harry Bergen, Patty’s father, is wounded. He is also harmful. Harry hurts Patty physically and mentally.…
Secondly, the accident also caused her mother to be burnt extremely badly. Her mother was also extremely pregnant, and about to have a baby. Unfortunately, her mother died giving birth to her baby brother, and this had a huge impact on her life. Her mother was a heroine figure in Billie Jo’s life, and she was the one who taught Billie Jo how to play…
It introduces us to a number of ghosts along with the treatment the Charles family bore. They were, like most of the blacks, victims of violence and when violence exceeds its limit it results in haunting. The haunting which the coming generations have to bear. The haunting in this story is the result of the forced separation of the members of the Charles family.…
“Louise wept at once, with sudden, wild abandonment, in her sister’s arms. When the storm of grief had spent itself, she went away to her room alone.” As she made her up the stairs to her room she made it clear that she wanted to be alone and didn’t want any to follow her. While Louise is going up to her room all these emotions are running though her mind. She gets up to her room and opens the door and there sits her big comfortable armchair facing the window.…
Mrs. Mallard was a young woman “afflicted with a heart trouble” (15) and the cause was unknown. One day, Mrs. Mallard was given horrific news of her husband’s death by her sister Josephine and Mr. Mallard’s friend Richard. The news was broken to her softly. She wept tears of sorrow in her sister’s arms before going upstairs to her bedroom. In her room she sat in this comfortable recliner facing the wide window. While sitting in her recliner, she sobbed a bit more “as a child who has cried itself to sleep” (15). As the fresh air entered the room followed by the sounds of sparrows singing and someone singing from afar, suddenly Mrs. Mallard were surprised with a nice easy breeze of life. Instantly, she felled a change as she started to acknowledge that her husband had gotten killed in this train wreck, a selfish sense of happiness.…
The novel follows the story of a young black girl named Celie, who was born into a world of poverty and segregation. It is an account of her life and the lives of those who surround her. As the tale comes to an end, Celie finds in her life the power of happiness and develops a spirit of joy and individuality which frees her from the past that had been haunting her for so long and reunites her with her loved ones. Thus, we see the power of redemption that becomes central to the novel and was something Walker herself strongly believed…
Like In DAL And Los in Billy Elliott the text concentrates on Billy’s family challenging his personal…