The acts of betrayal show who some of the characters really are and bring out the theme of this book. The two themes focused in the text are moving beyond the past and people will always face consequences. When Luke and Maggie were dating, he made her believe things about that river and how it was sacred. Maggie betrays Luke when she decides that Ruth’s body should be brought out of the river. Maggie’s father left her and her brother alone one day when they were younger. Maggie grew a strong dislike for her father when Ben suffered major burns while he was gone. Her father had to deal with the consequences for a while. After the towns controversy over how Ruth’s body would be taken out of the river, Maggie finally decides to forgive her father after all these years. The town betrays the river rats and the law when they allow a temporary damn to be put in to stop water from flowing so they can get her body out. When the dam fails the first time, the town does not let a second attempt to happen out of fear that another life would be lost. After the death of his twin brother, Ronny betrays the Sherriff and throws dynamite into the river to get the bodies out of the hydraulic.…
The coachman approached the side of the coach, opened the door and he peered inside the coach, "Okay lad come out. " Lucinda's level of fear intensified before being able to react as a result of sight of four riders in the distance, approaching the coach. One of the riders, she remembered was the man with the long beard covering his large unsightly scar. The coachman, "Leave the carriage or will I drag you out?" Staring directly into his eyes and drawing her knife: "I warn you, the best is that you will give up your plans, whatever that may be, you'll regret it if you would not."…
The scent of flowers carried strong over the valley. The overwhelming perfume of hundreds, if not thousands of untouched petals, was long lost to noses that grew up with roses in their nostrils, not able to pick out the aroma of a single stem. Not helping was the deepness of the valley, with the only way out a steep climb with materials they not only didn’t have, but had no hope of ever making.…
Directions: Before reading look up the following terms to help you better understand the novel. DUE ON THE FIRST DAY BACK.…
Within the pages of the novel Deadly Unna by Phillip Gwynne we are taken on a journey to a highly racist and bigoted town. Through the eyes of a young teenage boy, we see the world how he does and we experience the division and racism in this corrupt town.…
1) ”My temper was sometimes violent, and my passions vehement; but by some law in my temperature they were turned not towards childish pursuits but to an eager desire to learn” (19).…
“A live body and a dead body contain the same number of particles. Structurally, there's no discernible difference. Life and death are unquantifiable abstracts.”…
I believe that people are born neither inherently good nor evil, but are created as blank slates to be constructed by childhood impressions and other life experiences. In my opinion, the concepts of good and bad are impossible to be natural instinct. Rather, these ideas are mainly formed by the guidance and direction from one’s parents, and also by observation of the environment, and how others handle specific interactions.…
Every character in "Unwind" grows from the beginning of the story to the end. Their personality changes due to confrontation. Throughout the novel, Lev changes because of what he was born to do.…
When referring to the following quote stated by Harold Bloom, “The greatest paradox and most astonishing achievement of Mary Shelley’s novel is that the monster is more human than his creator.” I agree with his statement because it’s vivid to see that Victor lacked on some human characteristics such as emotions and feelings.…
At my school, it is required that outside reading novels are read in accompaniment with the texts of the perspective language arts classes themselves. These books are chosen by the student. When it comes to finding the right books, students are given a list and introduced to a wide range of stories and novels. The contents of these literary works are entirely diverse. Very often, people have problems with the issues they deal with and many books get banned. Just in 2004, the Renton School District in Washington state banned in its high schools Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain after an African-American student claimed that the book degraded her and her culture.* Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is one of those…
Victor Frankenstein's repudiate for the monster and the civilians reject are the outside elements that concludes in the monster becoming _______ Furthermore, while Frankenstein and his monster were conversing he reveals, “You, my creator, abhor me. Your fellow creatures spurn and hate me” (55). Frankenstein’s monster shunning and persecution resulted in him changing his personality and retaliating because, he could no longer hold his emotions within. Furthermore, his great feelings of vengeance for the society left the monster to kill and destroy. In addition, the overwhelming environmental influences of hate compels the monster to “be no more [so I] shall no longer feel the agonies which now consume me (127). Being neglected by his creator…
It was one very quiet night when the lights went out in the city of Albuquerque. The whole city thought that a transformer blew up. But, one girl in the city was freaking out and panicking. She knew something that no one else knew.She kept looking outside her window as if something was out there. Her parents kept telling her just to go to bed that their was nothing out there. She kept yelling “ No! No! No! they're going to take me away! I don't want them to take me again!!” Her parents just left her in her room, and she just kept on looking at the window. The window was dark; the only thing that gave out light was the moonlight. She got closer to the window thinking that maybe her parents were right that there is nothing out there. So, she…
The Monster, the result of Victor Frankenstein’s experiments that were used to finding a way to recreate life and to cure man of a disease that all possess, death. Victor Frankenstein’s experiment’s led to him dabbling with powers only with which that only that of God should possess, but unlike God Victor Frankenstein did not create an angel, but in his eyes the devil himself. The Monster plays a very significant part in Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”, his actions are what cause the story to proceed and give Victor Frankenstein his conflict within the book. Victor Frankenstein to some readers may seem to be the protagonist and the Monster is seen as the antagonist and in that persons mind that is how the Monsters’s role is within this novel,…
To begin with, for there to be an outsider to live in today’s society, would be an absolute disaster for it to live here. Like the monster that was created in the 1800s by, Victor Frankenstein, in the story Frankenstein. Not many people would even think of accepting it. There is a lot of police brutality going on with black people, and some officers are not being convicted of being killing these innocent people. Some Hispanics are being judged being a different race! With that being said, I believe that the monster will not survive at all. If normal people are being killed for their race, which they did not choose, imagine how they would treat a monster made from a dead corpse. He would be killed and the first thing someone would say is they felt their life was in danger, yet the monster was sitting on a park bench asleep. In today’s…