In our lives, we all have secret places that allow us to hide parts of our lives which we want to keep hidden from the world. A place where we can feel safe, alone, or a mixture of both. In the novel Jasper Jones, the author, Craig Silvey, attempts to bring forward this idea: he uncovers the hidden truth about the places we keep secret in our own lives. By revealing Jasper Jones’ secret place and disclosing additional information about Jasper by doing so, Craig Silvey depicts how Jasper’s secret place sheds light on his life especially his outcast position in society and his life living in the enclave. Jasper is born an outcast and the outcast mentality has become a major part of who he is.…
The story ‘’The Home Place’’ by Guy Vanderhaeghe is about a relationship between a father and a son. Throughout the story, the readers see and understand the reason behind Gil and Ronald broken relationship. In this story, the author implies that when a father puts is love for is land before his son, their relation will suffer. Vanderheaghe explains his theme with the help of the characters traits, the setting and conflicts.…
My second point is the Hermit. The Hermit is one of the side stories in the book they don't get that deep into the story but they give up just enough details to make a point out of it. The hermit in the book is considered to be evil by everyone in Wirrawee. But when Ellie discovers the Hermits den she finds old documents and photo's of his family. If he was so evil why would he keep them. Personally I think that he was putting his family out of their misery by shooting them, and he stayed away from everyone because he could not stand being judged.…
“Facing to yourself, Luke, facing to all the challenges! ”, a sound always said to him, shear panic holding him in place, Luke Garner, the main character in Among the Impostors, had spend his whole life in hiding, and had a great fear of the Population Police. His life is different from other children, full of challenges and dangers, the reason for all of this is that he is an illegal third child, to be seen by them, was certain death. It’s time for Luke to accept the responsibilities he felt to the other people who have helped him during his life. It’s time to be accountable. Luke’s responsibility is the major theme in this story. This first responsibility is to Mr. Talbot who removed Luke from a dangerous situation and placed him in a new school with a new chance for life. He also feels responsible for Jen, who lost her life to the Population Police, in a movement to make all the Shadow Children legal, Luke’s last responsibility is to all the Shadow Children who have and will try to help.…
“Secrets In the Shadows is without a doubt a page turner throughout the book and will have you on the edge of your seat wanting more.”…
The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom is a spectacular autobiographical book about how faith can conquer evil. The book is about the life of Corrie ten Boom, living during World War II when the Nazis tortured Jews. Corrie’s breathtaking actions during the book show her great love for all people.…
The country around the town of Kjöge is very bare. The town itself lies by the seashore, which is always beautiful, although it might be more beautiful than it is, because all around are flat fields, and a forest a long way off. But one always finds something beautiful in the spot that is one's own home, something for which one longs, even when one is in the most wonderful spot in the world.…
One of the major themes in this novel is the relationship between landscape and a person’s welfare. One of the most important ways that the novel shows this theme is by creating an opposition between India and England. The novel subtly attributes Mary's childhood sickness to her time in India: "Her face was yellow because she had been born in India and had always been ill in one way or another." India is consistently presented as a place which gives off illness, as well as a kind of living death: so long as Mary lived there, she was "always too hot and languid" to do anything. Her time on the moor begins to effect a change in Mary: she slowly begins to grow stronger and healthier, and her imagination, which had been inactive during her time in India, is reborn by her exploration of the manor grounds and her search for the secret garden. Her contact with English gardens, English boys, and English moors cures her of her Indian malaise.…
In the poem The Retreate Henry Vaughan deals with the loss of the heavenly glory experienced during the childhood and expresses a fanciful desire to get back that original stage. The theme, on the surface level, appears very simple; but going into the deeper the reader will find that the poem is founded on the diverse European idealistic, psychological, religious/mystical and philosophical doctrines in the western culture. On the socio-cultural level, the poem can be interpreted as a reflection of the urge for liberating the human psyche from the torments and tyrannies of civilization, an urge which, it must be said, has been expressed by Vaughan in the purest, distilled and highly cultivated form of thought. On the psychological level, the desire to go back to a happy childhood can be interpreted, Freud said, as an escape from the hard realities of life in the defence mechanism of regression, as a daydream, the root cause of which can be traced in the agoraphobia of a person, which constantly goads him/her to seek refuge in the mother’s womb. On the philosophical level, what Vaughan’s says in the poem, tallies with Plato’s theory of anamnesis and transmigration of the soul. But above all, the purpose of the poet here is didactic, and he has given to the poem a deep religious meaning and fervour by drawing upon the inherent Christian doctrines and symbols. The poem begins with the characteristic lament for the lost childhood days, “Happy those early days! When I Shin’d in my Angell-infancy.” The word “angel-infancy” refers to that period of life, which is marked of innocence and ignorance. If we think of this from a secular perspective, this period of life is seen to have a special attraction for all the human beings. So the poetic property has not been reduced in its secular appeal. But Vaughan is here thinking in terms of mystical Christian theology, in which the child occupies a significant place, on the one hand, symbolising…
Adolescents are constantly seeking boundaries in the hope of developing into an adult in the fastest possible way. The borderline between right and wrong becomes blurry in the fast pace contest and initial good intentions prove to be poor decisions made from an untenable standpoint. An example of this sort of bad decision-making appears in Anna Davis’ short story ‘Hiding in Cheesy’s Bedroom’, where 16-year-old Jane struggles with growing up in a very rebellious way.…
The main character in the short story “Land of the Lost” written by Steward O’Nan, is an elder woman. Throughout the entire short story we do not get to know her name or a description of how she looks. She works as a cashier at a BI-LO and lives alone with her German shepherd Ollie, her two sons moved out shortly after their parents got a divorce. Even though we do not get a lot to know about her looks, we get a lot of knowledge on her way of thinking and her mental state. Even though she is mentally stable, she is tremendously dedicated to a case in the media about a missing girl. She is at a point where it is more of an obsession to find her than it is a hobby or occupation she does when she have the time. She is so dedicated to this cause that she enrolled her dog Ollie in a course for sniffer dogs and beside of that she turns her older boy’s room into a command center. The reason for that is because she wants to feel important and accomplish something. She spends most of her time talking about the case and it got so severe that her boss at the BI-LO asked her to stop talking about it with the costumers. When she finally stops talking about it she begins to rethink her strategies and stockpile supplies that she will need in her search for the lost girl. The main character is well aware of how her dedication looks for other people that sees it; they would think she is stupid or crazy. That is the reason why she did not tell anyone about it before she had a suspicion about where the body was. After failing the first time in her search for the girl, she gets quiet paranoid and does not want to call anybody before she has made sure that it is a human body that she had found. She does not think rationally at this point because she is so dedicated and emotionally involved in the case.…
It was a dark and kooky night when it happened. My worst nightmare happened. My friends and I were coming home from the big football game with some girls when {pause} my friend dared me to go into the "so called" old haunted mansion on N. Klent and Broadway Ave.. Why he had to do it in front of my friends and some other kids from school? I was trapped and he knew it. So I walked up the old cracked walkway. Went up the stairs as the wood whined under the weight, and turned the doorknob. Phew I said as the clicking of the knob informed the door was locked. Its locked I yelled as I leaned against an old metal pole that probably once held a flag. Then clunk clunk creak {pause} the metal pole had been pushed down by the weight I had placed on it and the door had opened.…
secret. something that can not be known by everyone, except the people who create the secret. secrets can be for the good and in the same time it can have a negative effect that long in one's life.…
Small arms is the term used by military forces to describe a weapon which an individual solider can carry. As it is commonly said that these weapons are small or light but instead they are lethal and dangerous. There are 639 million of these weapons in circulation and 8 million more are produced every year. They are the major cause of civilian causalities now days. Small arms are an everlasting problem and because of its long life, low maintenance, high portability, relatively cheapness and easy availability these weapons are being used as illicit trafficking and are even operated by young children. These weapons are the reason for destabilizing an area.…
Most of the times, the room is dark. There are days when it is bright and I can see almost everything clearly. The sunshine is reflecting through the cracks in the door, spreading across the room. My face breaks into a smile, my eyes shine and happiness fills my heart as I think I can leave the darkness. I can leave and be happy, be myself and no one will care.…