Laurie Halse Anderson writes children’s and young adult novels. She wrote the novel Wintergirls and it was published in 2009. The main character is Lia Overbrook, and she wants to forgive herself and move on from her best friend's death. She tries almost everything she can to forget that her friend died because she wasn’t there to help her, but others won’t let her forget.…
I have finished the book, The House of the Scorpion, by Nancy Farmer, and I will be presenting readers with a book review of this book. As there are many spoilers in this review, if you are planning to read this book, I suggest you to turn back, and read the book first. Now, if you ignored my warning, it's time to read the book review! The story begins with the protagonist, Matt, in his youth years, when he is 0 to 6 years old. It starts off with Matt arguing with his caretaker, Celia.…
The book Hell's Belles covers the prostitution, vice, and crime in the early development of Denver. When someone thinks they are going to read a history book about any topic someone gets the idea that they will get just the most important points of history. Well this book dose the opposite it tells the story on how there were it most tell the story that is not talked about in the history books it about gambling, murder, and prostitution that were happening in the West and as well in Denver. The book does not tell on the way it might have been but it tells the story like it way the things that were really happening. It tells the reader on how women were used for prostitution and how there were not that many options of women at that point in time. The poor educated women were allowed into few jobs that were not prostitution in that time of history other women were not so lucky they were forced by men to go into prostitution there were women that would be drugged and raped. There was a person in the book that I found interesting Black Ide was a Denver prostitute that was arrested for killing a woman with a baseball bat for murdering a man…
A gang is defined as a group of people who want to control some places in the cities. Every group has a leader, who gives his people any tasks. The group's activities are usually criminal or pose a threat to the community. However, they don't usually see themselves as the real threat but rather as a group that works to improve their community. They wear specific colored clothing, jewelry, make certain hand signals, use certain graffiti, and specific jargon. It's usually assumed that gangs are composed of only males who have most likely dropped out of school and are unemployed. Louis Rodriguez is the author of "La Vida Loca: Two Generations of Gang Members", and he writes about his and his son's gangbanging experiences.…
Throughout this book there are many important details leading up to the trial of James Richardson. James Richardson was the accused in the case of the deceased NY Police Officer John Skagen. John Skagen was shot to death in a NY subway station on June 28, 1972. The Facts in this case are clear; Officer Skagen was coming home from court that day, he was in plain clothes at the time of the incident in question. He was off duty. As he went into the subway he had noticed a tall black male, with short hair, a dark complexion and a round face. Richardson was wearing dark pants and a waist-length green dashiki. Tucked in his waist was a nickel-plated, snub-nosed, .32 caliber revolver.…
Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Myers is about a young black male named Riche Perry from Harlem who enlists in the Vietnam war to try to help his single mother with bills. But due to misfiling he is sent into combat which he is not mentally ready for and does heavy soul searching into the meaning of life and why he is here. The story takes place in Vietnam several months between 1967 and 1968 during the Vietnam war at an American base at Chu Lai in South Vietnam. The narrator of the story is Richie Perry. Richie struggles to come to terms with the grim reality of war, which contradicts the myths about war that he believed going into it.…
Everything changed Thanksgiving week when five young women and girls were found on hillsides in the Glendale-Highland Park area. These five young women one of which was twelve, another only fourteen were not prostitutes, but "nice girls" who had been abducted from their middle-class neighborhoods.…
In Witches! The Absolutely True Tale of Disaster in Salem, Rosalyn Schanzer discusses the disastrous event which happened in Salem known as the Salem witch trials. Many afflicted girls blamed innocent townspeople, accusing them of being witches. Trials were held in a Salem court and many accused townspeople were later hanged in Salem. This catastrophe occurred in Salem for many reasons, including the concentrated population, the central location, and the belief system of those who lived there.…
Ryan Halligan, took his life October 7th, 2003 due to being bullied for years —tormented because he could never reach the average grade for his classes. He came from a special ed class and he was called “gay” when he fought his bully. This situation went on from fifth to seventh grade, yet no one decided to help. Bullies are like criminals to other kids, so if your kid was getting bullied wouldn't you want someone to help? In addition, here in the real world we have muggers, rapists, thieves, and killers. So many witnesses do nothing, I think we should do something; we need a Good Samaritans law.…
Many high level officials openly acknowledged their complicit role with vice crimes in exchange for bribes. In fact, Police Captain Alexander “Clubber” Williams was questioned by the committee in regards to the 83 brothels that brazenly operated in his precinct. He replied, “Well, they were fashionable.” In fact, Williams is even credited with nicknaming New York City’s most notorious red-light district, “the Tenderloin,” which was located in his precinct. In a double entendre he said, “I’ve been having chuck steak ever since I’ve been on the force, and now I’m going to have a bit of tenderloin.”…
This week I read the lovely bones by Alice Sebold. The book begins to tell us about a girl named Susie who is kidnapped and killed by her neighbor Mr.Harvey. Once she is in heavan she can desire anything she wants and it will come true, susie says "We had been given, in our heavens, our simplest dreams." The heavan that is created is intended to be peaceful and calming. As the reading goes on Susie is able to see and hear anything she wants to on earth. Susie can see her family and friends trying to cope with her death and how much of a struggle it has been on them (which ends up breaking the family apart). You can tell that Susie wants so badly to reach out to her family in some way to help them cope and find her murderer but is unable to…
The most important lesson of chapter 1, tells how the American police service have changed over time, and why it cannot be understood properly if it is examine alone. For example, in a crime scene, an officer has to gather his information from the witness otherwise he or she would never solve the crime, however, in working with the communities make their job a lot easier to find suspects. Many cases are still out there unsolved because they law enforcements can’t do the job alone. At the beginning of the 20th century, cities were staggering under the burden of machine politic, corruption, crime, poverty, and exploitation of women and children by industry. The police was less involved because during this…
individualism is “a social theory favoring freedom of action for individuals over collective or state control”. what this means is that the individual has control over what goes on in the society rather than a government or any one force controlling what the individual does, individualism could be shown in many different forms. examples of different forms individualism could be shown is through the way you dress, your moral beliefs, or even your actions.Individualism is shown through romantic, revolutionary, and colonial text in Sinners in the hands of an angry god, speech to Virginia conviction, and self reliance…
Jones, Mark R. Wicked Charleston: The Dark Side of the Holy City. Charleston: History, 2005. 123. Print.…
But, on the other hand, while the town period (1700 – 1775) crime was becoming more violent and more repetitive. The newspapers of that epoch reported “attacks to the Watchmen with swords, … and breaking windows” (62). In other words, Immigrants were seen as “criminal classes” rather than sinners One can infer that people became “responsible for their actions.”…