“Show me Yours” by Richard Van Camp narrates the promising and apparent upturned in life experienced by Richard, a middle-aged man who at the beginning has experienced a nadir in his life caused by addiction issues and harmful friendships. After a bad night, by mere randomness, he decides to glue a found baby picture of him to his grandparent saint’s necklace and wears it under his shirt. Abruptly, the baby picture necklace becomes a trend in his community and seems to encourage care and positivism around the participants of the furor. Richard, who starts experiencing acceptance and recognition around the locality also reunites with an old love, Shawna, with whom he spends the night and appears to bring more hope to Richard’s situation. At…
When Scottie Everett was told that volunteering hours were required to graduate, she couldn't help but avoid the subject. She was always the reserved, safer than sorry friend and knew her oldest best friend, Juliet Montres would not take no for an answer on where to apply.…
An old couple Ethel and Norman Thayer goes to a home on Golden Pond every summer. They will be celebrating Norman's eightieth birthday, and he makes frequent jokes about his own mortality but Ethel is not amused. Norman is also having bouts of memory loss, a reality he struggles to accept. While they are at the Golden Pond, their daughter Chelsea writes them a letter, telling them she is coming to visit for Norman’s birthday. Ethel is excited about Chelsea coming but Norman never seems real excited about anything. You can tell they don’t having the regular father daughter relationship. Chelsea also states how she is bringing her fiancé Bill with her, who’s a dentist…
Tim O'Brien, an author and avid reader, grew up near the borders of Iowa and South Dakota in Worthington, Minnesota, a typical small town in Midwestern America. He was born on October 1, 1946, making Tim a member of the post-World War II baby boomer generation. As a scrappy 18 year old, O'Brien traveled to St. Paul and enrolled at Macalester College. Throughout his years in college, O'Brien came to oppose the war in Vietnam. He didn't launch violent protests, as some radical activist groups had done, but instead joined the campaign of Eugene McCarthy, a presidential candidate from 1968 who openly opposed the fighting in Vietnam. O'Brien, who was an excellent student, completed his undergraduate degree by earning a bachelor's degree in…
The Walking Dead Season 7 is still a half a year away, but that's not stopping fans from trying to find out the identity of Negan's Season 6 finale victim. While many names have been thrown around, it could be the character of Rick Grimes that may actually be in danger.…
Over the years, many people have been diagnosed with psychological disorders, whether they were right or wrong. With the knowledge of these psychological disorders, authors and directors have made thousands of movies and television shows based on certain disorders to give an inside scoop of how it feels to be diagnosed with the specific, or more, diseases. But, besides movies and television shows, there have also been footage of real life people today with these disorders. One fictional character has played a part of not one, but many disorders. This fictional character is Dexter Morgan; He is the main character of the series Dexter that lasted 8 seasons long. Dexter Morgan is labeled as a “sociopath” that murders people but never gets caught…
Two men, though part of different stories, travel long journeys to return home. Their paths face many obstacles and trials. How do their stories compare? The main characters are Odysseus, from Homer’s, The Odyssey, and Everett from O Brother Where Art Thou, directed by Ethan and Joel Coen. Though O Brother Where Art Thou, is based on The Odyssey, the two share many similarities and differences, such as the characters’ encounters with others, conflicts faced in the stories, and characteristics of the major characters.…
The book 'Of Mice and Men' mainly illustrates the ranch life of Lennie and George and the conflicts between Lennie and other workers. The author uses details of their experience to demonstrate the helplessness and the powerlessness of the victims of the Great Depression and the falsity of American dream.…
In the novel The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson, although Dr. Henry Jekyll and Mr. Edward Hyde are of the same body, they have completely different personalities, as well as completely different physical appearances. While Dr. Jekyll “‘is a tall fine build of a man” (Stevenson 45), Mr. Hyde is described as “pale and dwarfish” (19). This contrasts the stature of both men. Dr. Jekyll is written to be tall, and Mr. Hyde short. The author writes Dr. Jekyll as having a “large handsome face” (24), yet creates a grotesque image for Mr. Hyde by giving him “an impression of deformity” (19) and “a displeasing smile” (19). These two men are written to be extremely different, not only in nature and appearance, but also…
In The Strange Case of Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson and “Coraline” by Neil Gaiman, both represent how doubles are reflections of characters inner desires. Double’s are objects or people who contain attributes a person represses, and does not have. But put the two objects or characters together they are equivalent to a human. However, the acts the doubles do in both novels are hidden by the characters to protect their identity. Both protagonists from both narratives enjoy their acts of rebellion their double does or they do in their double world. However, when a protagonist indulges in their double live there will be consequences.…
Jacob Jones, an introvert sophomore, exerts his energy into basketball rather than talking. It is said Jones has three special character traits that not many talented athletes his age have: focus, priorities, and the ability to be humble.…
Every person has a right to a different way of mental processes, a right to express their beliefs in ways they believe is morally and ethically right; however, we see in novel, “One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest” by Ken Kesey, that the patients of the mental ward are stripped of their rights and beliefs and labeled as outcast and troublemaker. Kesey tells the story about how individuals who were locked up in an asylum because they were different, grow and conquer the authoritarian figure, Nurse Ratchet, through the eyes and ears of the narrator, Chief Bromden. Chief Bromden, or “Chief Broom”, is the son of Chief Tee Ah Millatoona, which means “the pine that stands the tallest on the mountain, and a white woman…
The novel Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, written by Robert Louis Stevenson, is based off a nightmare. He was interested in what can make a person bad and good at the same time. Stevenson used imagery, diction, and details, to convey a grim mood.…
It is an enigma in which the characters have made an unrealistic life for themselves, although most of the main characters are no longer real. You would think that this is a classic sign of schizophrenia, but then what would you classify the wife and children who not only blocked a traumatic experience that ended in death, but believe that they are alive as well? This story was beautifully written and put together that there seems to be a series of different disorders, not only for Mr. Ward/ Mr. Will but for his deceased wife and children.…
Mr. Bleaney is a poem written by Phillip Larkin, which portrays the life of an isolated man in a confined room. The poem is a metaphor of Mr. Bleaney's life. The poem is written through the voice of an unknown speaker.…