Elizabeth Kolbert’s article “The Siege of Miami” pans out interesting structural patterns that can be overlooked at first glance. However, through a thorough analysis of Kolbert’s article, we can start to see how often certain fields and disciplines interconnect with the economic state of South Florida. For instance, Hal Wanless, a geological scientist who spent half a century studying how South Florida came to be, brings up a complex prediction that pans out an interesting structural pattern throughout the article. With the use of scientific data, he argues that insurance companies may stop selling policies, and banks may stop writing mortgages due to the impending risk that is posed by climate change, symbolizing an interconnected approach between…
The parents decision to move from Houston to Tangerine made Paul Fisher more of an outsider. They moved there because his father had just accepted a position as county engineer and where his older brother, Erik, a talented placekicker, can pursue options for scholarships in a state fanatic about football, Paul does not easily fit in.This decision was mostly one sided as they overlooked Paul’s future as a soccer player and focused on his brother's football “Dream”. When Paul was in Houston he was the starting goalkeeper and the star on his school soccer team and had enough potential to become a very good soccer player but…
Hurricane Katrina was a big deal in Louisiana but it didn’t brother John Curtis’s high school football team during the 2005-06 season. In this novel by Neal Thompson, Hurricane Season, Neal Thompson tells us about how Hurricane Katrina destroyed Louisiana, but John Curtis’s football team were full of dumb mistakes. The head coach of the Patriots was J.T. Curtis and the high school players were preparing themselves for the football season. J.T. Curtis was expecting to be ready for this football season, they pulled off their preseason win, but the game was full of mistakes. J.T. Curtis and the football team was done with their last preseason game and be ready to capture…
However, when Mike is killed due to a lighting strike during football practice, Paul learns through Joey to take control into his own hands, and after Lake Windsor Middle is partially destroyed because of a giant sinkhole, he jumps on the opportunity to move to Tangerine Middle in order to play soccer. Within days of his arrival, he meets Theresa Cruz, who guides him early on, and the soccer team itself-an assortment of people quite unlike any team he had played for. Victor Guzman and Tino Cruz are both intimidating tough guys, who are regularly suspended from school, but they let Paul settle in within their group, and Tino even allows Paul to join his group for a social science project.…
| Responder would feel the urgency and the traumatising experience that the character is going through.…
Imagine moving to Florida. The first thought that probably forms in your brain is the perfect place - palm trees and sunshine, and maybe even some tangerines. Well that is not how the main character, Paul Fisher, experiences it at all. The protagonist in the novel Tangerine by Edward Bloor has an entirely different experience. Whether it is the bad weather, his school, or his big-bad brother, he definitely isn’t living a paradise. This companion book jumps into Paul Fisher’s complicated life. In the first two chapters of the companion book, you analyze his first experiences in his new home where you can see his family and himself struggle and how they deal with certain situations which can tell the reader about their personality.…
The main action takes place near the town of Angle Inlet on the shores of The Lake of the Woods in northern Minnesota. John Wade and his wife Kathy move to a cabin on the lake shortly after he is handed a landslide loss in a senatorial primary race. In the race, the main character, John Wade, was revealed to have participated in a massacre at the village of My Lai during the Vietnam War. It was also revealed that Wade later altered his military documents to show that he was never involved in the incident; this is the reason behind the landslide loss. After a week at the remote cabin, Wade's wife, Kathy, and the only boat at the cabin mysteriously disappear. Despite a massive search, no trace of Kathy or the boat is never found. More than a month later, John Wade heads out in a small boat to search for his lost wife and he too is never seen again.…
Passage one and Passage two are both about Florida's Okefenokee Swamp, however they both have contrasting points of view. The author of Passage one is writing about the swamp as it is overall- in a disconnected sort of way- which is drastically different from Passage two which takes the reader right inside the swamp and shows the struggle of life that exists there. Thus, the authors of Passage one and Passage two, accomplish this task by an informative tone and formal diction in Passage one, versus a malicious diction and a derogatory tone in Passage two .In writing two essays on the Okefenokee Swamp, the first in 1988 and the latter in 1990, the author uses two contrasting styles to assert his or her personification of the swamp. In order to personify the swamp, juxtaposition, as well as metaphors and similes, are used.…
The story is told by Mike Tidwell, a man who chooses to hitchhike down the Bayou, catching rides on stranger's boats who he has never met before. He started on his exciting journey, not knowing what would become of him. Relying on strangers kindness, and a great deal of luck. Throughout the book the author travels down the 'Baya', as the Cajun people call it, and meets many people of Cajun background who call this place their home. The Author's main purpose in writing this book is to share with the world the lifestyle of these Cajun people; and how their home is disappearing before their own eyes. He wants to call attention to the rising problem of the disappearing marshlands, with the intention of slowing down the process.…
The author’s use of diction in the first passage and the second passage regarding the swamp is extremely different from one another. Throughout the first passage the author uses diction such as “primitive”, “festooned” and “exotic” to describe the swamp. The author’s formal tone and word choice helps convey that the swamp is a peaceful and safe environment that is appealing to others as well as to the author. The diction helps support as if the author is trying to persuade others to come to this swamp and enjoy its beauty Unlike the first passage, in the second passage the author uses diction such as “unfathomable”, “unconquerable” and “misery of life” to convey the atmosphere of this swamp. The author sees the swamp in the second passage in a more malicious and dark light that almost seems to be repelling the reader. The tone the author holds is almost as if he is trying to repel the reader from coming and visiting the swamp. It is negative and does not display any of the attributes that are associated with the swamp; instead it is very critical and focuses on all the peculiarities of the swamp. The word choice that is used in both the passages varies from one another and conveys different atmospheres for the swamp.…
The author two passages are informative about Florida’s Okefenokee Swamp. The author in Passage 1 supports this claim by using simple sentences to describe the swamp then finally using the last sentence as the negative thing about the swamp. Passage 1’s purpose is to inform tourists so they would want to visit, creating an inviting tone for the audience. The author in passage 2 supports this claim by informing about the smallest to biggest negative things about the swamp, then finally connecting the swamp with a “hellish zoo”. Passage 2’s purpose is to inform the improvements for the tourists about the swamp, creating a negative tone for the audience being researchers or geologist.…
These two passages were both written to describe the Okefenokee Swamp; however, the two pictures portrayed by the authors are very different. The first passage, through its didactic use of syntax, unemotional tone, and consistent diction, gives a view of the Okefenokee Swamp that is tame and pleasant. The second passage, in contrast, creates a wild and savage picture of the same swamp by using varied syntax, dark tone, and wandering diction.…
My first view of the river makes me breathless. Shallow water washes over the road’s cement pavement. Men, women, and kids break the river’s flow; some sit in fold-up chairs and read a book, but most others are leaning back in a colored tube floating the slow water. A giant cypress tree waits patiently by the road; two large nails pin a rusted metal sign to it, warning visitors of state rules and regulations. Every river crossing has the same sign posted the closet tree. The tree’s familiar sight and significance still makes me excited, because I finally feel summer vacation starting. However, the sight also makes me impatient for we don’t start tubing until the second day. I never…
In both stories, a plan to use portable dams to retrieve the body is implemented. These dams fail because of the rapid flow rate at which the water moves. Even though rescuers drill holes in the bedrock to support the dams, the force of the water destroys these supports. Divers were sent into the river to see if they could discover exactly where the body was lodged and how to get the girl out of the river. Political pressure and clout also played an important role in both accounts. Governors, senators, government agencies, and people that lived in the area where the accident occurred were pitted against each other in the attempt to determine how to retrieve the drowning victim.…
The experience of driving by where Katrina lived, where she was abducted, and where she was murdered was very moving. I found it very interesting to follow the trail of a murder as if I was on the case myself. The street where Katrina was abducted is a pretty busy street which is North Stevens St. in South Amboy. I could envision it at night how it could be an eerie place to be walking alone. As to why Katrina 's friend Katherine and her parents let her walk home alone, baffles me to this point. The walk from Katherine’s house to Katrina’s apartment was a pretty far distance. When I drove by car from house to house, it took me approximately fifteen minutes. A fifteen minute car drive is about a fourty-five minute walk. Katherine’s parents should have never let Katrina out of the house at night to do that walk alone. Katrina insisted that she would be fine and would have no problem walking alone. I assumed she felt this way probably because she had lived in the area her whole life and knew it pretty well. A 15 year old girl shouldn 't be walking alone in the midst of the night in any town. The abduction of Katrina could have been easily avoided if her friends ' parents took some responsibility. Driving down the road leading up to the "hole in a wall" led me to a spooky feeling. I could only imagine if I was walking alone at night into this tunnel with a feeling I would never escape.…