Literary Element: Legend: Johnny must read a story out of the bible about someone who wasn’t humble and that was Mr. Laphams way of teaching him a lesson.…
At the beginning of the book, and with Revere being 19, I never imagined that he would turn out being such an important person. The part of the book in which I was very surprised in was when the British surprisingly attacked. The British were invading the town and would kill everyone who crossed their path and the soldiers were burning people’s homes. This part of the book was very heartbreaking because I can only imagine all the dead bodies in the floor and all the houses being burned down and people not knowing where to go or what to do. This part of the book really got me thinking of how many times we the people fight or show aggressive when we have an issue instead of verbally trying to solve the…
Overall, the book, Patrick Henry: The Firebrand of the Revolution, is written remarkably. It provides a wonderfully detailed story of a pivotal character in the American Revolution. It is a strongly suggested read for anyone that would like to learn more about the nation’s founding…
Another surprise is that David McCullough, best known for Rushmore-size biographies of underrated presidents, wrestles America's founding year into a taut 294 pages of text, describing the trying months that followed the heroics at Lexington, Concord and the Battle of Bunker Hill. The result is a lucid and lively work that will engage both Revolutionary War bores and general readers who have avoided the subject since their school days.…
Rise to Rebellion, by Jeff Shaara, is the first volume to Shaara's two-part chronicle of the entire American Revolution; starting with the events of the Boston Massacre in March of 1770 and ending with the signing of The Declaration of Independence in 1776. Shaara attempts to relate to us the events as if each character he focuses on is telling the reader the story directly. In attempting to do this Shaara provides us with personal experiences, thoughtful dialogue, and what the characters are thinking- but these must be thought of as fiction. Shaara included these to give the book more depth, not to be historically accurate to the last words of dialogue. For example, there is no way anyone can know for sure what the…
Has any author tried to teach you something in one of his/her’s books. Well that's what Esther Forbes does in her book Johnny Tremain. There are three big main topics in Johnny Tremain and they are Patriotism, Pride, and Leadership.…
The book starts out with an account of the British troops leaving Boston Harbor in March of 1776. The people of America were celebrating George Washington and what they thought was the end of the war. Washington wasn’t so convinced. He alludes to many difficulties that he “was obliged to conceal then from my friends, indeed from my own Army.”…
1776, a brilliant book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough, retells the story of America’s brutal battle for independence throughout the American Revolution. In an informative tone, McCullough brings the American Revolution to life as he reiterates America’s history through the incorporation of details pertaining to each of the important figures of the war as well as the story format of his well-researched book. Through the use of visual aids such as maps and pictures depicting battles as well as the inclusion of personal and formal letters, McCullough is able to portray a vision of American hardship and success on a more personal level than most historic writers.…
I decided to select, Johnny Tremain, for my book report because of the fundamental and universal ideas the author, Esther Forbes, employs. Throughout the book, Forbes displays the dynamic of his characters and how the American Revolution transformed these boys into men. I appointed this book over others because of its underlying messages about Family, Friendship, and Patriotism. The cover of the book is nothing special, but displays the Revolution as a coming of age. The story begins by describing the life of the most gifted silversmith apprentice in Boston, Johnny Tremain. Tremain is determined to become the best silversmith but that takes a drastic turn when he decides to work on the sabbath and when Dove, one of the other apprentices hands him a broken crucible as a prank, it results in an accident that disfigures his hand and thus ends his career as a silversmith. Tremain tries to find a job, and finds one with his best friend Rab as a newspaper…
Along the way he meets June who turns him into the Republic. But then helps him escape and now they are criminals together. They both try and start a revolution against the Republic. This conflict is man vs. society since it is Day vs. the government. The conflict is not resolved in this book. Where the book leaves off is a couple of days after Day was supposed to be killed. But John stood in his place without the Republic knowing that it was John so he died instead. The Patriots rescued Day and June since June decided to join Day and leave the Republic after she realized how nasty the Republic was. So now the Republic is looking for both Day and June. “WANTED BY THE REPUBLIC” (Lu 1). This quote shows how Day is wanted by the republic. The Republic tries to find him in any way possible. They do not know what he looks like so they constantly make up a new look for a person but they have never actually guessed what Day looks like. Another time where is shows the Republic looking for Day and June is after Day escapes his death sentence and they are looking for the patriots since they have Tess with them. The patriots are a organization who are rebelling against the Republic. “Should be hard for any patrol to track us in this weather” (Lu 302). If the Republic was not looking for them, they would not have to worry about a patrol going out and searching for them. A song that connects to the conflict of the book “Legend” by Marie Lu is, “Edge of a Revolution” by Nickelback. The whole song is about people starting a revolution against the government, which is what Day has doing the whole book and June ever since she left her job as a soldier and joined Day. In the song, it sings, “What do we want? We want change. And how’re we gonna get there? Revolution” (Nickelback). This part of the song shows how they are not happy with what is going on and they want it to change.…
This book report is on the book, “Founding Brothers the Revolutionary Generation” written by Joseph J. Ellis. The book has 248 pages and was published in 2002. The book examines the political lives of some of the key players in the American Revolution, Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, Janes Madison, Thomas Jefferson, The Adam’s (John and Abigail) and George Washington. The author examines six events that took place in our history: The Duel, The Dinner, The Silence, The Farwell, The Collaborators and the Friendship. Ellis uses these events to form his thesis that the friendships, political alliances and rivalries helped shape the lives of our Founding Fathers and form the foundation of our new nation.…
The Shoemaker and the Tea Party gives us a key insight to the happenings of the American Revolution from the perspective of someone who was actually there and the general public, not just a bystander but someone who was involved and caught up in these key turning points and is now just looking back years after the fact. George Robert Twelves Hewes was a Boston Shoemaker who was an active participant in key turning points in the American Revolution such as the Boston Massacre and The Boston Tea Party. But this book also delves into the detail of when were these events actually considered turning points and when did they start calling them “events”.…
1776 by David McCullough is not just a book about the violence of war, but the emotions of those living during these times. The novel takes you on a journey of what life was truly like in the year of the Declaration of Independence. Leader General George Washington and two young American patriots, Nathanael Greene and Henry Knox, show the knowledge of war and the innocence of those with no experience of combat. Uncommon perspectives of situations are explained through the eyes of innocence and the eyes of the experienced. The story begins with the Siege of Boston, happening in 1775, and McCullough leads us through the events that drove the British to abandon Boston and eventually take New York.…
You may know this affair as ¨The Bloody Massacre¨, The Boston Massacre, ¨the incident on King street¨, but do you know the true story. In this tract-ate you'll find why this event even happened, the scene itself, how Paul revere's engraving was actually a propaganda, and the aftermath of this all!…
In his words, “The war was a longer, far more arduous, and more painful struggle than later generations would understand or sufficiently appreciate” (McCullough, 294). As he mentions in his thesis, he argues that the outcome of the Revolutionary war was “little short of a miracle” saying that circumstances, storms, contrary to winds, and the oddities of strengths of individual characters made the difference” (McCullough, 294). The book proves McCullough’s argument by discussing various hardships both sides faced and circumstances that seemed coincidental, but tipped the war in favor of the patriots, making it worthy to be called a…