This paper is my way of summarizing chapter 27. Summaries are a great way to explain and show the plot of stories. Since summarizing is also done in your own words it can be used to show your interpretation of that writing. The book also states that summaries are generally shorter than the original; however, each summary can be as long as you want them to be. Summaries can also contain just one sentence. Summaries are just like paraphrases in some way. Both are written in your own words and both show your understanding of the original writing. Summarizing can also be seen as a way of helping other people understand the point of the original…
manner. How does the order of the telling help shape the story’s meaning? What details foreshadow…
As you read the scenes in this lesson, take notes on important events in the story. Provide the line or lines from the play that relate to the event. Stop and think for a moment about why that event is important for the story and add your thoughts in the space provided.…
In The Lovely Bones, Sebold portrayed the subject matter lightly. It was not gory and gruesome, but it still depicted the repulsiveness and how horrifying it was. However, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Haddon’s portrayal of the subject matter was quite complex. As a result, it could lead readers to skip areas of the novel because they do not understand what is trying to be articulated. In contrast, Sebold’s portrayal allows the reader to better understand the story by letting them connect with the text.…
‘Ulysses’ is written in the form of a dramatic monologue. This form strongly involves the reader with no sense of distancing. Instead, the reader feels as if they are one of his “mariners” in the story who have “toil’d, and wrought, and thought” with him.…
Knowles is trying to comment that it is not possible to stay young and free as it is dangerous. Life is a survival of the fittest, and Phineas’s naivete ultimately leads him to his demise, because he cannot accept the reality of the war and the accident. Phineas undergoes three stages before acceptance: 1. denial, 2. anger, and 3. acceptance. He denies to accept the war’s existence and Gene’s role in his injury. Phineas believes it is better to be ignorant of Gene’s role in the accident because he does not want to doubt his friendship with Gene. He is also angry because he is forced to acknowledge the facts he has been avoiding and ignoring. He acts irrationally due to anger, like breaking his leg again by falling down the stairs. In the end,…
Although the excerpt primarily recounts the actions leading up to the tragedy, the piece also…
There are many memories that may come to mind when the word adolescence is spoken. Some people recall times of enjoyable, innocent adventures, but for others the phrase “teenage years” holds horrific memories. For a section of the populace their “teen experiences” may be the most appalling time period, as they begin to undergo many changes. This concept of dark adolescence is present, not only in the real world, but in the literary world as well. For example, in the novel A Separate Peace where a friendship turned in the wrong direction and a deadly war, mark the moments of growing up. While some readers believe that Phineas (Finny) and Gene’s separate peace shows the innocence of youthful occurrences; a closer inquiry demonstrates that through mental illness and death , adolescence is a time of terror, thus showing a theme of the realization of reality.…
Tears of the Desert is an incredible real life tale documenting the gruesome experiences of which the black African inhabitants of Darfur, Sudan suffer through. From the events witnessed, experienced, and recorded by the author and main character, Halima Bashir, we see the world through the eyes of a Zaghawa survivor of the most nightmarish terrors imaginable. Though Bashir was pushed to the brink of death, and her life has been filled to the brim with obstacles and adversity, she proves herself time and time again to be an extremely lucky individual.…
List the examples of important details the author chose to include. Explain how these details contribute to the emotional power of the piece.…
4.List the examples of important details the author chose to include. Explain how these details contribute to the emotional power of the piece.…
As you read the scenes in this lesson, take notes on important events in the story. Provide the line or lines from the play that relate to the event. Stop and think for a moment about why that event is important for the story and add your thoughts in the space provided.…
One passage that the author wrote that grabbed my attention was when he said "Imagine you are inside Phineas’s head, watching in extreme slow motion: See the pointy end of the rod enter under his left cheekbone, pass behind his left eye, through the front of his brain, and out the middle of his forehead just above the hairline. It takes a fraction of a fraction of a second for the iron rod to pass from cheekbone to forehead, through and through." This grabbed my attention because he is specifically explaining how the rod goes in his skull and how it comes out of his cheekbone. And I also liked this passage because he is writing it so u can get an image of how everything happens. This passage got my attention because of the way he explains…
Phineas Gage’s Behavior Does Phineas Gage’s brain act like an adolescent’s brain? Yes his brain does, because he is taking more risks and isn’t very wise about the consequences. He also has many mood swings and can’t understand money concepts beside counting, adding, and subtracting. He isn’t an adolescent, but his actions tell me otherwise.…
Analyse F. Scott Fitzgerald’s presentation of his first person narrator, Nick Carraway, in Chapter 1.…