In the fictional book The Outsiders, written by S.E Hinton, a 14 year old boy learns the way of…
My character in Hungry by H.A. Swain Thalia; also goes by the name of Apple, has grown throughout the novel because she has matured throughout the experiences she and Basil have gone through together.“You might be able to stop hunger and keep the world's population under your thumb, but you can’t control my emotions. Those are mine. They are part of me no matter what you say!”(page 123 H.A. Swain) Apple didn’t understand that her body...wasn’t hers, but her families to experiment on and review. She sees this after she returns home from a revolt meeting with Basil to be interrogated by her own mother, and be told that her feelings for him weren’t real. She is tired of her mother; the lead scientist of One world, telling her…
At the beginning of chapter 5, Jo is in her exercise clothes, and Meg can not believe that Jo decides to go out on such a cold, wet day. Jo heads over to her neighbor’s house, the Laurences. Ever since the New Year’s Party, Jo has wanted to talk with Laurie. To get his attention, she throws a snowball at his window. Laurie pokes his head out and explains that he is very sick and very bored, so he can not go outside.…
The main character in my story “The Big Field” written by Mike Lupica, is a fourteen year old boy named Hutch. He plays in a minor league baseball team in Florida for the Cardinals. He wants his team to win the championship. They can win the championship by playing their hardest and working together. Hutch is athletic, short tempered, and determined.…
In high school, students often face challenges that force them to grow up. From their first break up to peer pressure, they slowly begin losing their innocence. Similarity, in A Separate Peace two boys are exposed to hatred and violence in a military academy. During World War II, Gene and Phineas begin with a normal friendship, but throughout time they both face new conflicts. Through jealousy and paranoia, they change from friends to rivals. When challenges come face to face with Gene he attempts to get rid of them in the worst ways possible, which eventually leads him to a loss of innocence. In the novel A Separate Peace by John Knowles, Gene lives in his own world, but through his friendship with Phineas, he learns he has to face reality.…
Although The Screwtape Letters and The House of the Scorpion are very different stories by different authors, the main characters experience events that lead to growth. The main character, also known as the “patient”, in the Screwtape letters is tempted by an aspiring devil named Wormwood. The patient fights these temptations with the help of some friends especially his girlfriend. Likewise, Matt, the main character in The House of the Scorpion, has his friends Maria, Chacho, and Fidelito to help throughout his story. In both cases, the authors show that friends can help you through many temptations even when you have to oppose people who want you to die.…
The setting of Arthur Miller’s, The Crucible, conveys a powerful structure of jealousy to the reader’s understanding that Abigail Williams’ decision in concealing her affair with John Proctor will prevent charges of witchcraft on John Proctor’s wife, Elizabeth Proctor. In addition, Abigail William is marked as the lowest in the social pyramid in Salem. Witchcraft gave her instant recognition within Salem which fed her power from within, which led to the circulation of innocent people being indicted with false accusations.…
In the play, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard, the two main characters are destined to die. This is given away in the title. In the beginning of the play, they wander through a forrest flipping a coin. While strolling though the woods, they run into a troupe of actors called the Tragedians. They put on a show for them and the scene changes. They watch a play about their lives and realize that they will soon be murdered. The story of Hamlet is told through Rosencrantz and Guildenstern’s point of view. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, though minor characters in Hamlet, are given their own leading roles, which gives the reader a different side of the story. The characters, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, have very different personal…
One’s last words that linger in the dying of the light embody a conclusion to the great riddle that is life. In Heart of Darkness, by Joseph Conrad, Marlow’s obsession with the character Kurtz can be inferred by his relentless efforts to reach the Inner station. However, in this passage, the author reveals Marlow’s admiration for Kurtz’s moral strength rather than his utter obsession for his character. Marlow believes that life and death are both parts of a battle with which men have to wrestle and hope to gain “knowledge” themselves. In fact, Kurtz regains Marlow’s loyalty with his last words, “The horror!”, when he fights with death. As seen in this passage, Marlow admires Kurtz’s last efforts to separate himself from the other Europeans who have lost…
In the climax, Proctor was willing to at least reverse the effects of his actions to rescue the others around him, even if the price he reimbursed was his very own life. He does not cringe in fear at expressing his opinions on the events that transpire in the first scene. This is perceived when he says to Putnam, "You cannot command Mr. Parris. We vote by name in this society, not by acreage” (pg 1249). This exhibits that Proctor is not afraid to speak his thoughts even before a wealthier or more powerful man. Furthermore, Proctor’s mental strength of will to speak against a person, many others, including Reverend Parris, would not openly…
The main character of “The House of the Scorpion” is Matt. Matt is hopeful, loyal, and smart.…
In everyday life, people are put under many pressures and are expected to be perfect to society. In Edith Wharton’s, best-known and most popular novel, Ethan Frome, this idea is highlighted, showing the protagonist’s breakdown. Ethan Frome struggles against the customs and rules of society, fighting a battle within himself between what he wants in order to be happy and what he feels he must do to satisfy his family and society. Frome struggles between his desire for Mattie and his sense of duty toward Zeena, his wife. The pressures that come from the responsibilities in the Frome household lead to Ethan Frome’s emotional breakdown, showing how societal pressures can lead to harmful self-doubt.…
Change does not occur easily or without conflict. Change does not occur quickly nor smoothly. Many characters go through change in a novel, like Edna from The Awakening. Edna lives as a simple mother-woman and follows the general rules of society. She later experiences new bearings which lead to her self-discovery toward a better life. Edna kills herself at the end of the novel and frees herself from the social confinements.…
In The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, many characters go on a religious pilgrimage to Canterbury to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket. On the way to Canterbury, each person on the journey tells a tale. Whoever tells the best story, gets rewarded a lavish free meal. The pilgrimage includes people from the nobility, clergy, and commoner class. For each class, Chaucer develops many different character types that were representative of the society of the time. With a broad spectrum of people and action, The Canterbury tales consists of many different ideas such as social satire, courtly love/ chivalry,morality, and corruption and deceit. One of the most important ideas of the story is that Chaucer puts forward a criteria that…
When Montag meets Clarisse he realizes there is something different about her. Clarisse's personality is something Montag has never seen before. After going on a walk with Clarisse, Montag has many thoughts. On page 9 it says, “ What incredible power of identification the girl had; she was like the eager watcher of a marionette show, anticipating each flicker of an eyelid, each gesture of his hand, each flick of a finger, the moment before it began. How long had they walked together? Three minutes? Five? Yet how large that time seemed now. How immense a figure she was on the stage before him; what a shadow she threw on the wall with her slender body!” Montag thinks this in his head when he gets home from the walk with Clarisse. This is the very beginning of Montag’s realization that there is more to life than what his society is telling him.…