In his story-based composition, McCullough writes to interest even the pickiest of readers. He personifies the tales of the American Revolution, allowing even the dullest of battles to become suddenly amusing. Also, he provides anecdotes of most of the leading generals of the war, allowing the reader…
In 1820, Cooper published his first book, Precaution about morality and manners; because he decided he would write a better book than the one he was reading at the time. Shortly after, Cooper also wrote The Spy: A Tale of Neutral Ground, which became the first…
Welch, William M. "Could Uncle L.D. have been 'D.B. Cooper '?." USA Today n.d.: Academic…
In this historical fiction novel, James Fenimore Cooper both amuses and acquaints the reader with a build on the romantic fiction of captivity, sexuality, and heroism. His readers also learn of how the French and Indians massacred the British at Fort William Henry.…
William Cooper’s Town: Power and Persuasion on the Frontier of the Early Republic is an amazing piece of historical writing. Alan Taylor, the author of this non-fiction work, engages the reader with detailed descriptions and thoroughly researched facts, bringing the society of New York in the 1780’s and 1790’s to life. The book portrays the true story of William Cooper and his American dream-come-true. William Cooper, the main character, is the middle child of a poor Quaker farming family, who lived in Byberry, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. From such meager beginnings, he slowly climbs the social hierarchy to become a prominent land owner and a U.S. congressman. Alan Taylor uses the events of William Cooper’s life to portray important…
The Last of the Mohicans is an American classic, was written by James Fenimore Cooper and published in 1826. The Last of the Mohicans was written in the third person omniscient point of view, is a narrative and is in the Historical fiction genre. Cooper’s novel follows the story of the two daughters of a British general (Cora and Alice), the generals trusty major (Heyward), a tag along singer (Gamut), Their Huron guide turned renegade (Magua), and the last two noble Indians of their race (Uncas and Chingachgook). Cooper’s writing career was, oddly enough, started on a dare. One day he threw a novel down in disgust, saying he could write better. His wife Susan then challenged him saying if he could write better he should…
Lummi Indians were the first settlers on San Juan Island, with encampments along the north end of the island. North-end beaches were especially busy during the annual salmon migration, when hundreds of tribal members would gather along the shoreline to fish, cook, and exchange news. The reservation is a five mile long peninsula which forms Lummi Bay on the west, Bellingham Bay on the east, with a smaller peninsula of Sandy Point, Portage Island and the associated tidelands.…
Burt, Daniel S. The Chronology of American Literature: America’s Literary Achievements from the Colonial Era to Modern Times…
Cooper and the American Wilderness – James Fenimore Cooper was the first great American novelist (The Last of the Mohicans, The Deerslayer) His novels “The Leatherstocking Tales” were a celebration of the American spirit and landscape…
In “Barn Burning”, a short story by William Faulkner, a boy finds that he can no longer be governed by his father’s ideas and tries to prevent his father from doing further harm, and leaves his family in the process. Sarty Snopes desire is to break away from the moral deficiency of his family life and live life with some resemblance of normalcy even at the expense of never seeing his family again. A growing body of evidence, suggest that humans have a moral sense from the very start of life and family does not instill this moral compass from the very start of life.…
In comparing the three authors and the literary works of women authors, Kate Chopin (1850 -1904), "The Awakening", Charlotte Perkins Gilman 's (1860-1935), "The Yellow Wallpaper", and Edith Wharton 's (1862-1937) "Souls Belated", many common social issues related to women are brought to light, and though subtly pointed out are an outcry against the conventions of the time. In these three stories, which were written between 1899 and 1913, the era was a time in which it seems, women had finally awaken to realize their social oppression and were becoming rebellious in their pursuit of freedom from the male-dominated societal convention in which they existed. They commenced viewing their social stature as unjustly inferior, and they realized that these conventions placed deterrents on their intellectual and personal growth, and on their freedom to function as an independent person. All three of these women authors have by their literary works, voiced their strong unfavorable feelings about the patriarchal society in which they lived.…
We are the Makoniens, privacy Isn’t among us. We are a unique kind of aliens on the planet Eldera. Our houses/ buildings are up In tall Redwood Trees that Is taller or as near the the height of the Eiffel Tower. This makes It so we are away from the predators that are on the ground. We climb the tree’s with our hands.We use vins to swing to places we can’t jump or climb to. We aren't hostile only If we need to be, then we will. It will be rare to find anything written by Makoniens because the laws are the only thing that Is written. We don’t force them to learn how to write, why would we? When we can read eachother's minds.…
What is that Alice Walker, Zora Neale Hurston, and Belles Lettres have in common with J. California Cooper? They’re women? Or they’re famous authors who have written some of the best literature that the world has seen? Maybe, however the one thing that stands out about J. California Copper from the rest is one word, storytelling. It’s one thing to write a short story were as the reader can pretty much pin point who’s who, what the issue is, and what steps they take to solve the problem. However it takes a real artist, true to the craft, to create a masterpiece that is so daring and defying that calling it a short story would be in insult to the author and the work. Stories that have a combination of rhythm and emotion can only hold the title being called a parable. And with parables comes life learned lessons that are disturbed by tough love or falling down a few times to understand the saying You want to make God laugh, tell him your plans.…
James Fenimore Cooper was born on September 15, 1789 and by the time of his death; he was considered the “national novelist” of America. In his novel, The Last of the Mohicans, we have a classic story set in the 1700 's. During this time, the French and Indian War is raging, complicated by an additional dispute between two Indian tribes, the Mohicans and the Hurons. Throughout the book we see characters with hearts that are strong and brave, but in spite of the characters, we see the inhumanity of the cruelty of the war. In The Last of the Mohicans, the theme is a conflict between civilization and savagery, and Cooper portrays a clash between races/cultures through the interracial friendship of Hawkeye and Chingachgook, through the barbarity between the Mohicans and the Hurons, and through the interracial love between Cora and Uncas.…
“Indian Camp” was written in 1924, during the 1920s it was believed that the Indians would eventually become extinct. However, when they did not become extinct, the Indians moved to secluded areas where they were out of the non-Indian’s sight (Native American Netroots). Although many non-Indians wished the Indians would become extinct, research shows that Hemingway had a collection of fifty-seven books on Indians in his library (Meyers 215). It has been shown as well that Hemingway was well read in anthropology. Hemingway was also known to be a student of Frazer, who was known for his belief “that the primitive past influenced the psychology of the present” (Meyers 216). Hemingway was also known to boast of Indian blood, Indian mistresses, Indian daughters, and he enjoyed imitating Indian speech (Meyers 215). Hemingway even ventured sexually with instinctive people, otherwise known as Indians (Meyers 215).…