Tiffany is worried about her newborn son. Ever since she brought Caleb home from the hospital it has been so hard to get him to eat and he seems to be breathing too hard all the time. At his one month check-up, the nurse tells her that Caleb has only gained one pound since he was born and Tiffany breaks into tears.…
Deb Towns is the nurse manager of the cardiac rehabilitation program at Memorial Medical Center. She is an R.N. whose leadership position is unique because she also created the program she is in charge of. Deb had a vision and used her leadership skills to see that vision become a reality.…
In A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers, the audience can see how insecure Dave is about having to take the role of a parent for his little brother, Toph. Throughout the book Dave is constantly thinking about how everyone thinks that Dave shouldn’t be taking care of Christopher or he is an unfit parent. Dave wants to give the very best to Toph but most of the time that isn’t possible. For example, when they were looking for houses people were rejecting them saying the two weren’t the best fit or didn’t think they could pay. One landlord who was sceptical was unsure about Dave’s lack of job and their age. Dave responded “We can pay. We have money. We could pay the year’s rent all at once if you want” (76., which made the…
Bii) Describe the possible tensions that may arise between telling others of Hannah’s decision and keeping this information totally confidential.…
In Hansberry’s play A Raisin in the Sun, the protagonist Walter is portrayed as stubborn, childish, and later determined to show his transition into manhood.…
In The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold demonstrates how Susie is able to grow through her heavenly/earthly experiences while she watches the grief of her family and the guilt of her loved ones. Fourteen years old is a young age; Susie has yet to experience some of the best moments of her life. The Lovely Bones portrays Susie’s experiences in the In-Between and how she can still live her life through her mortal loved ones.…
Memoirs of a Geisha is full of admiration, primarily to Western readers who are unaccustomed with the spiritual Japanese geisha. As a geisha, you is positioned to entertain men with dance, conversation, and song. Many people believe geishas are considered as prostitutes, but really they represent the past of Japan more than they represent prostitutes. Marc Canter mentioned how these geishas go through a variety of changes in their roles in the past and are now absolutely different from where they started out at. Are geishas still considered as prostitutes? Arthur Golden, in his novel Memoirs of a Geisha, revealed that “there’s a world where appearances are dominant; where a girl's virginity is auctioned to the highest bidder; where women are…
In William Faulkner’s, “A Rose for Emily” Mrs. Emily Grierson is the most prominent character, illustrated by the narrator. Strong willed and determined, Emily’s performance has been characterized as strong and peculiar. The narrator touches on the fact that Emily could be intellectually insecure. In this short story Emily seems to be trapped in her ways, never wanting to seek the opportunity to develop her sense of knowledge or progress to alter the way she cooperates with the townspeople. This is demonstrated through countless situations in the story, the most significant being her denial of having to pay taxes, as she simply believes she do not have any. Further occasions…
a young boy and his family travel to a remote cabin the family inherited from the boy’s grandfather. On the way, his mom tells him a story about “playing card people” who are ruining their lives. They are going to sell many of the possessions in the cabin because they need the money. When they arrive, both of his parents dawn masks, telling him it’s an old tradition. The next day, he is dispatched to the woods to gather firewood. He encounters a boy, riding an old fashioned bike, and wearing a nightgown. He’s frightened of the boy for reasons he cannot explain. He detours around him and encounters two more kids. These kids play a strange card game with him. If he wins, he gets…
Recitatif by Toni Morrison is a story about two girls, Twyla and Roberta, who initially meet in home for children called St. Bonaventure, St. Bonny for short. At their initial meeting there are feelings of mistrust from both sides, but eventually come to bond with each other. We find out early that one is black and one is white but which is which is never revealed. Twyla was sent to St. Bonny because her mother “dances all night” and Roberta because her mother is sick. Since they were placed there and are not orphans like the majority of the home they are considered outcast. With this they become close and feel like allies against all the other orphans and the older girls they call “gar-girls” who are meant to them, and they share a fascination…
The essay will be about the Novel Throwaway Daughter a fiction that is about a girl named Grace on a journey of finding her identity. The main story is about a young girl Grace Parker, who was abandoned in front of the orphanage by her mother and was adopted by a Canadian family. She is haunted by the fact why she was unwanted by her parents and she denied her heritage until she witness the death of protesters in Tiananmen square. As she continues to mature and grow she becomes more curious about her mother of what happened to her,thus her journey begins in china on a quest of finding the answers and herself.Grace (Dong-mei’s) journey allows her to fully embrace her heritage, finally giving her an identity through her childhood, adolescence,…
President John F. Kennedy once said that, “conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth.” This concept has been seen through centuries of civil rights movements and literature by renowned authors such as Franz Kafka and Henrik Ibsen. Franz Kafka’s short story, “The Metamorphosis,” illustrates the life of traveling salesman Gregor Samsa, the breadwinner of his family who seems to face a transformation that affects his role in his house and society. This change into an unknown insect, both physical and mental, ultimately leads to his loss of humanistic characteristics and eventually death. In Henrik Ibsen’s play A Doll’s House, a young woman named Nora surpasses the bounds of a housewife when attempting to save her husband’s life.…
An individual can be drawn to a given novel for multiple reasons. Kim Edwards draws in her readers with her deeply moving page turners. Edwards includes psychological detail in her works, making connection to readers easy. When reading the descriptions of her novels, one quickly finds themselves eager to start reading. Her first novel, The Memory Keeper’s Daughter delves into the fear of loss. Every person on this earth fears losing something. A common fear for parents is the fear of losing their child. In the book The Memory Keeper’s Daughter, secrets are constantly being revealed. In her second novel, The Lake of Dreams, Edwards focuses on personal revelations. The Lake of Dreams is a story set in the past. When a writer visits a character’s…
Roberta (Bobbie) being the eldest of the lot is often found to exhibit caring and protective traits in the story. There is an instance in the story where she stays alone with Jim when he lies in the tunnel unconscious (Pg.129) and another where she saves her brother Peter when he is caught by the bargee (Pg. 88). Through these instances, the author is trying to subtly tell us how essential it is in a sibling relationship to safeguard the interests of one another.…
In the Memory Keeper’s Daughter written by Kim Edward, the main character, David Henry, made a decision that has impacted not only his life but the rest of his family also. David was a very confusing character. Henry’s character played an important role because the decision of giving his daughter up changed his whole life and broke his family apart. When his wife went into labor he delivered the twin babies, Paul and Phoebe. When Phoebe entered the world he noticed she has defects in her face and hands that lead him to diagnose her with autism. He decided to give up his daughter, because he was afraid of what society would think and was afraid that an abnormal child would destroy his current family; just like his sister did during his childhood. Due to the result of giving up his daughter, one very major secret has stood in the middle of their family. Deception, secrets, and regrets have shaped the family and caused major problems throughout their life.…