Her plans for today had to be changed to relaxing and mentally disconnecting. Saturday was now
Her plans for today had to be changed to relaxing and mentally disconnecting. Saturday was now
The author Julia Butterfly Hill book is a personal reference of the adversity she overcame when faced with saving a part of nature, a part of what defines her, a piece of something she would never let go of. In this novel the author gives biographical evidence of not only her love of saving the redwood trees. The story begins in December of 1996, in the town of Stafford, California. There was a mudslide which was catastrophic and buried seven homes. The removal of the redwood trees was what she states to be a cause and effect of this disaster because they absorb the moisture that causes erosion. She was up against the Maxxam Corporation an organization who wanted to cut down the Redwood Forests of California to make profit of the ever needing demand of lumber.…
Nevertheless, Bertrande knows these self-centred intentions, when put into action, will ultimately be reflected by the displeasure and distress of her children and the Mesnie. I am destroying the happiness of my family. And why? to free myself from the deceit which was consuming and killing me.' Bertrande's strong desire to free herself…
In the book Luna by, Julie Anne Peters which is a young adult fiction novel. This book takes place at the high school that they attend and also in their home.…
The author has proven that the life of Mayella has been hard and has readers sympathize with Mayella because of her tough living situation, which is a run- down home with piles of discarded trash surrounding the front of it. And also because of the , lack of money that circulates in the family, which has then caused herself and her siblings to go starved at times because they didn’t have any money to buy food. The author’s sympathetic attitude towards Mayella extends in chapter 18 when Mayella testifies in court against the behalf of Tom Robinson. Mayella has tried hard to pick up the pieces in her life that her father broke. And in court Mayella cracks open her hard outer layer and facade that she puts on, and admits what goes on in her personal…
Australian theatre practitioners use various performance styles, techniques and dramatic conventions to help portray their ideas to their audiences and make them feel a particular way to the ideas presented in a play. Without the use of these styles, techniques and conventions it wouldn’t be possible for the practitioners to emphasise their ideas. In the play ‘Ruby Moon’ Matt Cameron the playwright uses various techniques such as symbolism, transformational acting, cyclical and episodic dramatic structure and a fractured fairytale.…
At a young age, Oscar was what nowadays you may call a “player”, he had girls left and right and at times couldn’t even decide which one he wanted more. He was “one of those preschool loverboys who was always trying to kiss the girls, always coming up behind them during a merengue and giving them the pelvic pump” (p.11). However, one day Oscar lost his touch; it could have been the Fuku, the Dominican family curse, but that did not matter because Oscar was no longer the “player” he used to be. He languished in his room playing video games, eating and becoming larger and writing his fiction novels. There was no love, no social life and the only females he would speak to on a daily basis were his mother and sister. The dilemma was the moment Oscar would come into contact with another girl, he would fall head over heels “in love”. He would dream about her day and night admiring every perfect quality and flaw she had, Oscar became obsessive. But, Oscar was severely depressed, he even tried to kill himself when the girl he loved did not love him back. When one is not exposed to love one loses all their self worth. Oscar may have had other issues that caused his depression, but the force of love is so strong and so crucial for the survival of a human being that without it one can almost wither away, as Oscar did.…
Pilar is a cautious girl, she lets fear rule her live and in doing so she denies the things that she wants. When she and her childhood friend were younger, he wanted to confess to her that he loved her, but she out of fear for her feelings, his, and being left behind, she cut him off and distracted him by asking if he had seen a medal that she lost. Pilar then thinks back thinks back to the first time she saw her friend in 10 years, and thinks, “For four days I had ignored my heart’s voice… the Other had become desperate. In the furthest corner of my soul, my true self existed, and I still believed in my dreams” (Coelho 46). Pilar knows she loves her friend, she had known since they were younger,…
Mother continues to fight against Fez’s rules by ignoring meal schedules, holding family picnics of her own, and wishing for her daughter’s happiness. Mother explains that happiness comes from the “right to exercise all kinds of rights, from the right to move to the right to create, compete, and challenge and at the same time could feel love doing so” (118). Mernissi’s father on the other hand is a mixture between the two contrasting dynamics, “he sympathized with Mother, and felt torn between his duty towards the traditional family and his desire to make her happy” (116). Father feels a strong a sense of responsibility to hold onto traditional family values, but often puts aside such values to make Mother happy. The dialogue used within “Moonlit Nights of Laughter” further exemplifies certain situations and personalities. Quoting words from that person gives further characterization and insight rather than Mernissi just telling it as it…
Franco, like many other women in todays age, has a very hateful tongue when talking about the man that deceived her. While elaborating on how she is going to make her man suffer, one could easily tell that she has regret in her heart. “Although I hope,…
From when the narrator is ten years old, we are shown glimpses of hope through his actions and personality. After being told by his panicked father that ‘the future is a hospital, packed with sick people, packed with hurt people’ the narrator simply wants to know how to ‘prepare’ for that. This naïve courage displayed by the innocent ten year old foreshadows the determination he will show as he grows older, whilst experiencing reoccurring trauma. After meeting Margo, the narrator is forever hopeful of securing her as a long-term partner in life. He is deeply in love with her, ‘It’s like wanting her to be here becomes so strong it almost makes me forget she’s not’ but finds it hard to put his feelings into action, anticipating the probable rejection from strong-willed and decisive Margo, ‘Silently, I ask her to marry me’.…
Kate Chopin tackles complex issues involved in the interplay of female independence, love, and marriage through her brief but effective characterization of the supposedly widowed Louise Mallard in her last hour of her life. After discovering that her husband has died in a train accident, Mrs. Mallard faces conflicting emotions of grief at her husband’s death and exultation at the prospects for freedom in the remainder of her life. The latter emotion eventually takes precedence in her thoughts. As with many successful short stories, however, the story does not end peacefully at this point but instead creates a climactic twist. The reversal—the revelation that her husband did not die after all, shatters Louise’s vision of her new life and ironically creates a tragic ending out of what initially appeared to be a fortuitous turn events.…
Much like Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, Florentino Ariza is in love with soap operas and romance novels, so much so all his letters to Daza when they are young read just like one. He is so involved with the idea of romance after Fermina’s rejection of him he makes a pass time writing love letters for other couples. Ariza is all youthful passion and intensity saying, “Age has no reality except in the physical world. The essence of a human being is resistant to the passage of time. Our inner lives are eternal, which is to say that our spirits remain as youthful and vigorous as when we were in full bloom. Think of love as a state of grace, not the means to anything, but the alpha and omega. An end in itself.” Needless to say, he’s all swoon and flowery words as he makes his way into the bed of over six hundred women in the course of his life while pretending to be faithful to only Fermina. None of the women know about the others and each is told that she is his first and only, perpetuating Ariza’s illusion of himself that he is a heart sick and loyal love puppy in need of nurturing.…
Arturo has a very strange relationship with women, whether it be Vera, Camilla, or a random women on the streets. Arturo develops an attraction towards Camilla, a Mexican-American women who he finds faintly attractive, “With a Mayan nose, flat with large nostrils. Her lips were heavily rouged, with the thickness of a negress’ lips. She was a racial type, and as such she was beautiful, but she was too strange for me” (Fante 34). Arturo starts off saying how lovely she is but then contradicts himself by saying she is too strange. One minute Arturo is happy with Camilla and the next his is cursing her off under his breath. “You call me beautiful at home, then you are ashamed to be seen with me in public. You are ashamed of beauty you recognize that no one else does. You are ashamed to love me!” (Fante) Camilla recognizes that Arturo is unaware of how he feels and she confronts him about it. He hates the feeling of lust that she gives him so he runs to church to “cleanse” himself. Arturo is incapability of having true feelings towards a women stems from the fact that he is unsure of what love is.…
As a young bride she quickly came to realize that her marriage was not that of the telenovelas that her and her girlfriends watched religiously. Her marriage didn’t have the passion she craved as a young girl and that her husband was not the dashing man of her dreams.…
Often times people believe that there are no consequences in loving a person dearly, because being with the person you love will make life a happily ever after. In the book, “Like Water for Chocolate,” Laura Esquivel takes on this misconception and states otherwise. She beautifully writes about the love story between a secretive couple, Pedro and Tita. Though their love for each other is real and grounded in truth, they face many challenges and hardships that separate them being together. Then once they are allowed to have each other, they discover the consequences their love had cheat them into. Through the romantic symbols of Tita and Pedro’s relationship, the author makes the comment that true love cannot be achieved without facing the eternal…