Cited: Anderson, Laurie Halse. Fever 1793. New York City: Simon and Schuster For Young People, 2000. Print.
Cited: Anderson, Laurie Halse. Fever 1793. New York City: Simon and Schuster For Young People, 2000. Print.
For the next few years, on balmy spring days, blistering summer noons, and cold, wet, and wintry middays, Annie never disappointed her customers, who could count on seeing the tall, brown-skin woman bent over her brazier, carefully turning the meat pies. When she felt certain that the workers had become dependent on her, she built a stall between the two hives of industry and let the men run to her for their lunchtime…
In the book, Fever 1793, by Laurie Halse Anderson, a thirteen year old girl named Matilda Cook lives with her mother and grandfather in Philadelphia, helping run the Cook coffeehouse. At first Matilda’s life is normal and it seems like it will stay that way, until yellow fever spreads through the city and destroys everything she knows. The community in Philadelphia is torn apart by fear, loved ones abandon each other and even the generals and war heroes who fought against the British in the Revolutionary War leave Philadelphia in search of safety. The wealthy flee to the country, but those who stay either steal from others or avoid helping the sick and dying. However some people stay to help others, tending to the sick and saving their lives.…
Fever 1793 is about the summer of 1793 and Matilda (aka) Mattie Cook lives above her family's…
The book “Fever 1793” by Laurie Halse Anderson has many themes. A central theme would be Perseverance. The book takes place in Philadelphia when fever spreads like wildfire. Mattie is now faced with many responsibility and challenges. She now has to face her fears and try her best and her hardest to survive.…
Matilda Cook, or Mattie, is a 14 year old girl who is stuck in a yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia. Thousands died after only a month, and it wasn't long before her mother got it and sent her away to the country. All did not go well on the way there. Her grandfather got sick, prohibiting them from moving to the fever-free country land. Mattie was left to help keep him alive. Shortly after, Mattie fell ill and woke in a huge hospital surrounded by other yellow fever victims. Fortunately, her grandfather survived. However, this was only the very beginning of Mattie’s struggle to stay alive.…
Fever 1793 written by Laurie Halse Anderson is “A gripping story about living morally under the shadow of rampant death.” The story shows a part of the world that many of us don’t know what feels like. It draws you into the plot, and makes you contemplate how you would act in the life threatening situation. In the story, a young adult, Mattie, is living through the fever in Philadelphia. With lots of loss, and sorrow Mattie always finds something to look forward too. The book Fever 1793 suggests that there will always be conflict, pain, suffering, and disease in life. If you focus in on the bright side, and put the things that matter, that remind you that there are things in life better than this, you can get through it.…
Yellow fever is a that's lasted six weeks throughout Philadelphia. I, Alex Malesich have been sent here in 1793 by king George lll from England to cure yellow fever. He wanted me to find out what is a better cure for the fever, the Philadelphia or the French cure.There has are ready been thousands and thousands of deaths. The fever has spread like a wildfire all over Philadelphia and is still going.…
The Hot Zone is a best-selling 1994 non-fiction bio-thriller by Richard Preston about the origins and incidents involving viral hemorrhagic fevers, particularly Ebola viruses and Marburg viruses. This book is based upon an outbreak of the Ebola virus in a monkey house located in the Washington, D.C. suburb of Reston, Virginia. The author weaves together the tales of several previous outbreaks in Africa to describe clearly the potential damage such an outbreak could cause. The first appearance of an Ebola-like virus takes place in Kenya and costs the life of a French emigrant named Charles Monet. His bloody, painful death is re-told in graphic and terrifying terms. Hospital personnel treating Monet become ill as well, demonstrating the extreme danger of exposure to this disease. Through this thriller story, many interesting details take place and the reader might not realize the parts of biology in this book.…
The film ‘Matilda’ released in 1996, directed by Danny DeVito stars Mara Wilson as Matilda. ‘Matilda’ a film about a young child genius (Matilda) who is born into a family that does not care for her. The movie follows Matilda as she dives into a world of hammer throws and chokeys to prove Agatha Trunchbull the brawny, muscular woman serving as the remorseless headmistress of Matilda's school (Crunchem Hall Elementary School) wrong. With the help of Jennifer "Jen" Honey who is a kind and compassionate woman who takes an immediate liking to Matilda. DeVito uses a variety of different film techniques to depict Jennifer Honey as benevolent. Some techniques used in the movie are the ways her…
She began to move around like one in a dream. She undressed Thomas `a Becket, stripping him of everything, and put the tow-linen shirt on him. She put his coral necklace on her own child 's neck. Then she placed the children side by side, and after earnest inspection she muttered: "Now who would b 'lieve clo 'es could do de like o ' dat? Dog my cats if it ain 't all I kin do to tell t ' other fum which, let alone his pappy."(p 15)…
Yellow fever killed over 5,000 people in Philadelphia in 1793. Yellow fever is a highly contagious fever that is transmitted by mosquitoes. Some symptoms of yellow fever include an onset of fever, chills, severe headache, nausea, fatigue, weakness, and vomiting. Treatment of yellow fever in the 1700’s included bloodletting, herbs, other material treatments, and also simply doing nothing. In Fever 1793, Laurie Halse Anderson alters history, but maintains some historical accuracy. The setting of the wharfs is both the same and different from the actual wharfs at that time.…
The yellow fever is a murder to Philadelphia. It killed thousands people in philadelphia. That why I volunteered to come to Philadelphia and put my physician training to use. I am going to write a composition of how the philadelphia way of curing the yellow fever and the french way of curing the yellow fever by the order of King George the Third I need to do this. There is to treatments that can cure the yellow fever.…
Everyone is always fearful when they hear about an infectious virus outbreak. For example, the Bubonic Plague and Ebola, created a frantic scare all around the world. The author, Richard Preston, depicts and describes the many different filovirus outbreaks that were exposed, taking over the human race throughout the entire book. The novel illustrates how the virus outbreaks had its outbursts, rapidly demolishing and destroying the human population gradually as there is no known cure and control over the destruction. Richard Preston discusses in The Hot Zone, the different factors that contribute to those outbreaks, such as hygiene and the lack of knowledge about the virus. Even a slight lack of hygiene can possibly contribute to the vital outbreaks in numerous ways.…
Though her outer appearance seemed content, the novel unfolds a bleak and unhappy life. All aspects of Marian’s life have fallen to the waste side and she has begun to work through the motions. Relationships, jobs, and friendships, makes Marian feel as if she is moving through thick uncontrollable mud. The lack of control that grows within Marian allows for space to develop the eating disorder that is the main focus of the entire novel. It begins with the stigma that food is something in which we examine under a fine tooth microscope.The disorder in which she portrays throughout the novel begins by cutting herself off from one food and continues to where all food repulses her. It is similar of that to pregnancy hormones. Her body rejects the smell,look and texture of certain foods, until she can eat nothing at all. Meat is the beginning of this disorder. This happens when she goes out to dinner with Peter, Ainsley, and Len. Peter orders a steak along with one for Marian. As he begins to cut into Marian visualizes the diagram of a planned cow that hangs in her office. She claims a dislike to the thought of animals being tortured and mistreated in order to be consumed and refuses to eat the cut of meat (Atwood). Next Marian cuts out vegetables during her engagement party. Finally, she cuts out sugary products by the end of the night. Marian confesses this illness to her friend, Clara, who assures her that these are just nerves for her upcoming…
Not only this, but underneath the eeriness of this play lies a very real, deeply tragic story of two parents who have lost their child and gone mad to cope with the grief of never knowing what happened to her. So much so that the reject every opportunity to find out for fear of it being bad news, in favour of keeping up the game they play with each other. The tension between…