Peasant Fires: The Drummer of Niklashausen is a novel telling the story of Hans Behem, a street musician and illiterate shepherd. Written by Richard Wunderli, this book does a great job of immersing its readers into the historical background of the Middle Ages. The book focuses around Hans Behem and the pilgrims who later become Hans Behem’s cult following. Hans gains said cult following by delivering a set of sermons, each one more radical than the last. These sermons cause problems and eventually the authorities come after Hans.…
In the book Fire In The Ashes by Jonathan Kozol , who is a famous journalist and writer, he explores the poverty and the life of several kids from New York. There are two kids named Eric and Christopher. Eric who is black and Christopher who is white. Both kids lived in the Martinique Hotel and both kids entered the hotel because one of their parents had died. Christopher barely has any friends. Unlike Christopher, Eric, has a few friends and they influence him in negative ways. While Eric and Christopher did not enter the shelters at the same exact age or had the same gender parent die in common, they both end up committing…
Richard W. Wrangham is a Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard University. He had a long term study in Kanyawara chimpanzees and he was well known for his work in the ecology of primate social system. The book Catching Fire refers to the activities of our human ancestors when they began to use fire to practice cooked diet. Although the topic is pretty academic, but Richard used simple sentences and words to explain his ideas well. Yet the proof is still preciseness with provided evidences, and the conclusion is convincible. Hence, this source should be trustable.…
Panian’s peaceful life as a five-year-old boy in the village of Gurin was interrupted drastically. Being forced to abandon his home and walk months through unknown lands. Only to be lead into a concentration camp outside Hama with his family. Armenians across the country were brought to the desert left in the scorching heat. Surrounded by death, his only option was to leave his living relatives behind, only to endure the…
Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness is an autobiography by Susannah Cahalan documenting her month-long stay in a hospital, where later she had no memory of being. Before her hospital visit, Susannah found two red bumps on her arm, but being in New York City, she assumed that they were bedbugs. She became obsessed with the idea that her apartment was infested, but an exterminator confirmed that she didn’t have them.…
In Fires in the Mind, by Kathleen Cushman, a majority of her words were on mastery and motivation of youth. Kathleen spent a great deal of her time questioning children about different aspects of deliberate practice, mastery in/out of school, and what it means to be a master. In her journey to find answers, she found that many kids already practice deliberate practice outside of school in extracurricular activities (sports, crafts, hobbies, etc.) and wanted to see if the same applied to inside school as well. She discovered, through the kid’s words, that they felt they couldn’t practice the same because it was boring, or irrelevant to them. With that in mind, it provoked many ideas on how to build the class to be engaged and motivate them…
1.The author included the quote from Hitler as the epigraph because he wrote "Who does now remember the Armenians" before the question and Hitler's quote answered it. The quote answers the question because only Hitler remembered the Armenians and did the same to the Jews. My ideas didn't change after reading Forgotten Fire because I already knew the story about the Armenian Genocide.…
Robert Cromie, author of The Great Chicago Fire, was very informed on the subject of this book because of his excellent educational background and later careers. Cromie was a graduate of Oberlin College in Ohio. During his college years he mainly studied history. He would later join the Chicago Tribune where he would become a reliable and hardworking reporter and journalist. In 1969, he began writing a column that made him the first staff writer to exhibit a liberal perspective for the Chicago Tribune that was known for its conservative viewpoint (Struzzi). The reason this fact is so important is because it helps readers understand that he was very reliable and many writers trusted Cromie when it came to writing and reporting. He was a very…
Foxfire is a page turning novel about a newly formed girl’s gang in the 1950’s. This story is written by Joyce Carol Oates, published by Penguin Group, and has 316 pages. This is a vivid novel and is a great read. On a rating scale of one to five, I would defiantly say this is a five! It gives amazing details that makes you believe you are in the 50’s watching these rebellious girls making their own rules and doing as they please.…
I can’t fathom how destitute and depressed the slaves were. Can you imagine what the slaves must have heard at night while locked in the basement? Or how they must have felt when their fellow conspirators, who may have played a more minor role in the revolt, were sentenced and then burned or roasted alive? I have been doing some reading in the Minutes of the Common Council of the City of New York, 1675-1776 that you had been telling me about.. I read about how City Hall had only recently been “updated” with better security. What a joke that is! They didn’t have security in that jail. I read an account about the new measures which consisted of wood studs and plaster. The plaster could not stop whispers from echoing the rooms. Either their plaster was much stronger than that of modern society or these new “cells” were not secure at all. Or maybe this shows the swiftness that the courts had in those times. Maybe the walls did not need to be better because the people locked inside would not be in them long enough to bust through. I read through several court proceeding notes and the majority of those accused were sentenced within a week. There was even an account of a young slave boy who was arrested and charged with being a runaway slave. The unique story of this boy was that he was arrested in the morning, charged in the afternoon, then publicly whipped…
Douglas Stewart's radio play, The Fire On The Snow, first performed in 1941, presents the story of Captain Falcon Robert Scott's tragic expedition to the South Pole. In the radio play, Stewart skilfully positions the audience to accept the dominant reading of the play by showing the dominant discourse: that heroes' nobility depends on their action and ordinary people can become heroes too. Stewart also positions the audience by using the role of the Announcer as a mask for himself to give comments to the stages during play in lyric verse forms and factual commentary statements, and also involve the men's dialogue.…
As a child our first hero is typically either our mother or father. We do everything we can to make them proud and grow up to be just like them. We tend to mimic their actions because we think it will make us more similar to them. In some situations we might find ourselves lying for our parents to cover up things that they do to avoid them getting into any trouble. As we grow older we tend to realize that we are not the same as mom and dad; we are our own person. However, it is thanks to our parents that we begin to find ourselves because we either follow their steps or learn from their mistakes. This situation sounds familiar to many and it is the same situation that is portrayed in many stories. [Universal Idea]…
Nonfiction Book Assignment Burned Alive by Souad takes readers on a journey like no other. The book retells the life of a young Palestinian girl named Souad. She grew up in a small village where the treatment of women drastically differs from that in North America, Europe, and many other parts of the world. Honour crimes and killings are a regular occurrence for their village and unfortunately, Souad fell victim to one.…
How would a 12 year old boy who watched his family die around him be able to escape the extermination of his kind? Forgotten Fire, a compelling historical novel by Adam Bagdasarian, follows the journey of Vahan Kenderian as he tries to survive the Armenian genocide. Vahan watches the world he knew collapse around him as those he cared about leave him due to the horrific circumstances placed on them. During his time the young boy meets many people who help Vahan on his journey to safety. Vahan develops his character through the people he meets during his journey, ultimately becoming the son his parents had envisioned.…
At one point in our lives we were all children, learning things about life, experiencing new things, and understanding life’s lessons. We were all naïve and knew nothing about the world around us, we were all innocent to life and what it had to bring. It was not until we grew older that we began to lose our innocence with every new experience. Growing older means taking responsibility, accepting and overcoming life’s hardships and understanding oneself. So as we reach adulthood we begin to question when the conversion from innocence to experience occurs and what causes and marks this coming of age. In the novel They Poured Fire on Us From The Sky, the characters and plot prolong the opposition of innocence and experience and show us how they continuously overlap and occur throughout the lifetime of an individual. By analyzing the boy’s experiences of being refugees, their encounters with war, and their relationship and appreciation for the Dinkaland, we become aware of the connection between innocence and experience and how it is portrayed and represented in the novel.…