Whithersoever, Josh begins
Whithersoever, Josh begins
Indigenous people are traditionally known for their strong connection to their land, culture, and community. However, in the novel In Search Of April Raintree written by Beatrice Monsioner, this reality is challenged. Beatrice Monsioner shows how big of a negative impact society has on Indigenous peoples through this novel. Two sisters April and Cheryl Raintree have been faced with brutal experiences of victimization. Their lives have been turned upside down for who they are and because of this April had chosen to leave her identity behind for something society would accept. While Cheryl went strong with her deep ties to her culture and people but at the end they had come to realize the truth.…
“Chapter 1” of No Promises in the Wind begins with the author, Irene Hunt, placing Josh in his bedroom with his brother. It is a quarter until four o’clock, and Josh has to go to work delivering papers. Sleepily, Josh’s little brother, Joey, volunteers to be his aide. Reluctantly, Josh refuses, due to Joey’s chronic illness and frail body. Ever since he was a baby Joey has been sickly. Although he was ill, he was strong-willed and determined to live despite the doctor’s diagnosis.…
20 years ago, a man saved her life, by putting his own life in danger. He ran across 4 lanes of freeway traffic, to bring her to safety after being in a car accident that could have killed her. The man was a total stranger, who took off after making sure she was okay – she never even got his name. Marsh wonders why he did so and started questioning why some people have a different level of altruism than others.…
The book begins with Marion Blumenthal, a young girl sleeping on her mother’s arm in a concentration camp in Bergen-Belsen, a town northwest of Berlin. Their fellow inmates are dying by the dozen. Marion vividly describes the horrors she experienced in the camp. Daily she found herself stepping over dead bodies that were just left strewn about. One of the worst torments was the daily roll call. They would stand in the below zero temperatures for hours on end with barely a layer of clothing to protect them from the frost. There was one good part of her day however; Marion and her mom would spot her father and brother Albert, and for a few short moments they got to be a family. Albert and dad always brought “surprises”. They brought what “extra” food they had saved from the previous day. Marion would bring along her secret treasure; four perfect pebbles. Marion’s pebbles gave her a sense of purpose, and belief that it would keep her family together.…
In the begining of the book Paul (the main charachter)is a boy that has a lot of fear and who is scared to stand up to himself. In the novel Paul has flashbacks about him and his brother.In Paul's flashback Paul is remembering a time when he is walking home and some people in a black car is hitting mail boxes and as In the begining of the book Paul (the main charachter)is a boy that has a lot of fear and who is scared to stand up to himself. In the novel Paul has flashbacks about him and his brother.In Paul's flashback…
Is it ever ok to break the law to help friends? That is exactly what Irene Gut Opdyke did. During the Holocaust Irene helped save many Jewish families. Irene lived a courageous live, and today is known as a hero to many people around the world.…
Her younger brother dies on the trip there, due to suspicious circumstances and illness. They bury him in the cold winter snow and while they are burying him one the workers drop a book and she picks it up. The book is called “The Grave Digger's Handbook”, but she does not know this because she was never taught to read. The book is the only memory of her brother she has. In a way it is a good thing, his suffering is stopped early. When she first arrives she is reluctant, but soon opens up to her stepfather Hans. She tells him about her brother and her inability to read. Hans then prepares himself to teach her. School is hard for her since she is unable to read, but meets a boy, which eventually becomes her best friend, Rudy. Once she gets the hang of it she creates a new obsession for herself. The first book she reads is “The Grave Digger's…
2. Why do you feel the author chooses to begin the novel this way? How does that affect your opinion of the novel?…
“Now that you have started reading this essay, you and I are now connected by a web of connections.” This is what Susan Griffin, author of “Our Secret”, a chapter taken from Griffin’s insightful book A Chorus of Stones, most likely would have declared. Griffin argues that, “all of us, especially all of us who read her essay - are part of a complex web of connections” (265). But how are people who do not even know each other connected? Griffin implies that people are part of a “larger matrix” and have a “common past” (265). The “common past” between people that Griffin asserts can be proved by examining the unique underlying comparisons and analogies she applies in the chapter. “Our Secret” is a collection of Griffin’s own life story and the life stories of others, including Heinrich Himmler, Heinz, a painter, a friend, Holocaust survivors, a homosexual man, and her sister. She even uses RNA and cells as analogies to indicate how even the materials that compose people have similar functions to people themselves. Although people may question how…
The book In Search of April Raintree, by Beatrice Culleton Mosionier, is about the trials and tribulations of two sisters growing up in the foster system. The author writes about these two young sisters and writes about the struggles in their lives. She talks about the social system, stereotypes, drug, alcohol abuse, and the girls on-going battle to fit in with society to become ‘normal’.…
The book starts with Bryon and his best friend, Mark, at a bar, owned by their friend Charlie. Bryon and Mark are a couple of typical kids in the area. They live in the ghetto, where they get in fights, are involved in local gangs, and at this point, hustling people at pool. The pair of kids are very good at hustling. That’s how they get the majority of their money to buy soda and beer from Charlie, even though they are under-age. Next, they leave the bar to go meet their strange friend M&M. M&M is a 13 year old kid that is very mature for his age. He does things different from everyone else that he knows. M&M got his nickname from always eating M&Ms. He enjoys reading and taking care of his huge family. His parents force him to take care of his younger siblings, but he would do it anyway. While Bryon, Mark and M&M are together, M&M mentions his older sister Cathy is home. She will come back into the book later.…
I would recommend Irene Cordero as a 3D computer animation teacher. She guided us step by step with clear instructions and tutorials to follow along each process. She was able to identify the problems in modeling and rigging that I would have mistakenly made. Her class was a huge challenge. She graded me professionally and fair. I have never been able to discipline myself to work harder than in any of my other class before. I have to spend countess hours outside of class to work on my computer animation. The outcome of her class help me built a better understand of Maya, and help me create a proud animation for my portfolio.…
The conflict in the this book is that Junie B is a first grader just how she wanted. But the first day of school he dad had to carry her inside room one which is her classroom because she was so scared. Even worse, Junie sees her best friend from kindergarten Lucille and Lucille ignores her and doesn't want to be friends with junie anymore for no exact reason. That made Junie feel like first grade was going to be the worst year of her life. Junie’s new teacher Mrs. Scary was not scary at all for her. He handed out jornales and that was where Junie wrote how she felt. The next day junie saw her her bus friend Grace with someone else and also lost her as a friend so found Herb. Herb is a new boy that takes the bus together and are in the same class so they became best friend. Together with Jose and Lienne.…
The book is split into three parts, the first detailing the life of Sarah, a young teenage girl who lives through the nuclear war with her family and what they must do to survive. It shows the struggles of a family trying to survive the nuclear fallout, how they must change how they live, the food they eat and the way they interact with each other. Sarah’s story brings to light how hard it would be to live in a world that had suffered a nuclear war and the horror that would be a constant in your life. It details how Sarah must overcome the awkward relationship with her stepmother to try and ensure her family’s survival. Sarah’s little sister, Catherine, has a very strong instinct to survive, she makes a cubby under the table, will only eat canned food and drink bottled water that had no chance of contamination. Catherine is the only family member to survive.…
At the beginning of the book the main character Catlin woke up on her birthday to find a present from her sister Cass sitting outside of her door with a letter attached to it saying that she had run away. ”My sister Cass ran away the morning of my sixteenth birthday, she left a present, wrapped sitting outside my door (Pg.1, Par. 1)”. Cass was supposed to go to Yale in a few days but was feeling too much pressure from her parents to be perfect, so Cass ran away with her boyfriend Adam to be together. Catlin then becomes lost without Cass around and feels she has no one to tell her feelings to since Catlin has been with Cass her whole life. In the middle of the book Catlin was watching Television when she saw Cass on a television show called “The Larmont Whipper Show” Catlin and…