I am reading “The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant” by W. D. Wetherell. This story is about a fourteen-year-old boy crushing over a seventeen-year-old girl, he has to choose over her or a bass. In this journal I will be questioning who he picks.…
He loved Sheila because he would watch her everyday when she tanning. He likes her because she beautiful. He hardly knows who she is. He took her to the fair in a canoe and he was the only one paddling. He cut the line on the biggest bass of his life just for her.…
The narrators from "The Bass the River, Sheila Mant" and "American History" have much in common with some distinctions throughout the stories. The narrator (TBRSM) and Elena (AH) both start by watching their neighbors from either through a window or from across the water, as they began to gain confidence to confront them. Both narrators fall in love, in TBRSM the narrator mentions how he finds Sheila Mant the only thing lovelier than a bass and in AH Elena's mother says, "'Elena, you are acting... Enamorada,'". Although, the narrators share these similarities their stories take different turns. Elena was not in love with Eugene when they first met, unlike the narrator who was with Sheila Mant. Also, in "The Bass the River, Sheila Mant,"…
Marcus Jordan is a 16 year old boy that Just moved to a new town in the middle of summer. He was on the football team at his previous school and intended to be on the one in his new school, so he practiced by himself at a park. That shows that he is very disciplined and determined (page one, paragraph three). Out of nowhere, this other figure comes in and starts practicing with Marcus. His name was Charlie, and it looked to be like he was in his mid forties. It turns out he's very good at football. Marcus had no idea who this guy was but in the text it describes Marcus having a very competitive nature (page five, paragraph two). Charlie throws the ball too high and it breaks the window of a car. Charlie ditches the crime scene. Marcus could have just as easily ditched too but decides to leave a note with his phone number so he could pay for it, which shows that he's an honest guy (page 8, paragraph 3). There are several examples of this throughout the story, like when he offered to pay for the ice Charlie just took from the store ( page 28 , paragraph 8).…
He learns about the fish and what kind of fish they are and what they like to do. Another reason, why he might pick the fish is because it’s gigantic it’s once of a life time kind of fish. He has never seen a bass this big before. The reason I know it’s so huge is because of how he explained it the way it jumped out of the water how its pulling the boat and the rod. Third reason he might pick the bass is because he noticed how selfish Sheila is she’s talking about how she’s better than other people and she’s being snobby she’s talking about how she hates all of these people and that they are ugly and talk too much. He’s also ignoring Sheila and trying to get the fish instead of paying attention to her. But their is a possibility he could pick Sheila. The reason he might is that he has a huge crush on her he watches her every move and stalks her. Second reason is because of how attracted he is to her. He knows her moods he knows when she’s in a good mood or bad mood.…
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…
The motif of the river, and less specifically water, is used by Winton to make reference to Christian and Indigenous spirituality. The novel is bookended with the scene at the river, creating a tone of predetermination that is supported by an excerpt from the hymn Shall we Gather at the River? The water motif threads through many of the key events in the story, including Sam ironically losing his hand to the ‘Hairy hand’, Fish’s drowning, Quick’s mystical fishing trip, and the formation of Quick and Rose’s relationship. The author of Cloudstreet and the field of Australian Literature, Robert Dixon, believes the river’s main role in the novel is to be a ‘switching point between the physical and the spiritual’, which is supported by Fish and Quick’s fishing trip. During this trip, Quick believes that ‘the river is full of sky as well’, metaphorically bringing the heavens into the water. By using ‘the beautiful, the beautiful, the river’ as an element in concluding and opening the novel, Winton creates a sense that the novel is a complete text of strong…
In “The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant” the main character acts on impulse, because he loves fishing, and when he caught the bass he was overwhelmed with happiness, but he knows that Sheila dislikes fishing, and doesn’t think much…
I am reading “The Bass, the River, and Shelia Mant” by W.D. Wetherell. This story is about the narrator who likes a older girl and asks her on a date. When she accepts they go in a canoe to the dance and he hooks a Bass and has to choose. In this journal I will be questioning and connecting. I am wondering weather or not the narrator will choose Shelia or the Bass. I will also be connecting a decision where it ended up in regret.…
The main theme i believe to be in this story is slavery because the majority of the book discusses the issues within the community of ex-slaves and how they are trying to get their lives together. One of the questions asked is “what is the difference between a man and an animal?”, and the novel…
The boy really likes the girl and thinks she is pretty, he knows she has money, and he also knows there are other fish. The boy also really wants the fish and he knows that it is the biggest fish he’s ever had, he’s been fishing all his life and is very passionate about it, and he doesn’t want to just give up and dump his gear in the river. He knows she gots money but the things her family has but the fish is the biggest fish he’s ever had. He knows she is pretty by the look of her when she came out that night in the beautiful white dress but he has fished is whole life it is a passion for…
Sometimes life just does not allow us to reach our goals, sometimes people find bumps and rough patches between them and their dreams, and sometimes it seems like the only option is to give up and move on, however, if you really want something and don’t get it at the first attempt, are you a loser for failing or a success for trying?. Michael Arndt’s script, “Little Miss Sunshine”, tells the story of Olive Hoover, and how her dream of participating in a children’s beauty pageant brings her, and her dysfunctional but caring family into an eventful road trip from their home in Albuquerque, New Mexico to California. In the 2006 movie adaptation of the script, by following the stories of Olive’s…
The fish tank is a symbol of the ebb and flow between good and bad times. The fish’s existence which relies solely on the owner 's hand is predictable only by the constancy of the protagonists’ marriage. When the marriage is stable the aquarium is clean, the fish is well fed and happy “wondrously free, swimming – for all he knew – in Lake Superior… free of desires, needs, and everything else” (218). This clean state represents the favorable parts of life. When the marriage become unstable the opposite happens, the aquarium became a filthy mess, “the water so clotted it had become a substantial mass, a putty within the fish was presumably swimming, or dead” (215). The dirty stage symbolizes the base facets of life; the water is restricted, dark, and full of need. The fish tank is a representation of the ephemeral nature of life and the good and bad times we all face in our own lives.…
In the U.S alone there are over 24,500 gangs and over 750,000 gang members. The outsiders explores the lives of gang members and how each of their lives are affected by this constant never ending conflict. How being part of either one of these brings the breath of death ever so closer.…
The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant is a short story about lost love, realization, moving on, but most of all, letting go of what you love. The readers follow along as our fourteen-year-old narrator falls for 17 year-old Sheila Mant during a Vermont summer. The author reveals the theme throughout the use of characterization, plot, irony, imagery, and many more. Throughout the story, the narrator is trying to woo Sheila and takes her on a boat ride up to a concert. But, just as things were going swimmingly, our narrator realizes he didn't pull up his line he has under the boat. This normally wouldn't have been a problem, as he would usually have been able to reel it in, but everything changed after Sheila said that she didn't like fishing.…