In the book The Leaving, I think the author, Tara Alterbrando, was trying to get the point across not to trust everyone you meet and to be aware of your surroundings. In this book, 6 kindergarteners were abducted and only 5 of them returned 11 years later with no memory of what happened to them. It turns out that their principal along with a scientist took them and tried to erase their memory of a school shooting. The experiment ended up lasting longer than expected and they had to keep the kids for 11 more years. People shouldn’t have trusted the principal and should’ve been paying more attention and been aware of the kids.…
Turtles give hope “Slower than the rest” by Cynthia Rylant is a realistic fiction about a boy named Leo. In the beginning, Leo and his family are in the car driving Leo yells, “There's a turtle.” The car halts Leo gets out of the car to pick up the turtle. Soon Leo feels happy and names the turtle Charlie. In the end Leo has to make a presentation on wildlife and uses Charlie as an example of a slow animals.…
ISR 3 The First Part Last by Angela Johnson is a book about a teenage boy named Bobby Morris a sixteen year old boy who has just found out on his birthday that his girlfriend Nia is pregnant with his child. After finding out this news a lot has changed in not just her life ,but also Bobbys. This isn’t your typical pregnancy story where the dad is not in the child's life it’s actually just the quite opposite.…
This chapter which introduced me to Lia’s family was interesting. I was shocked to read that in her mother’s country of Laos, Lia would have been born by her mother squatting on the floor! They also used special created remedies to solve health issues without relying on hospitals or clinics. It was also interesting to read how important the Hmong people believed in sprits and how their life decisions where decided around the sprit actions. For example, they believed that male sprit’s held up their house roof, if the male’s placenta was buried near the central pillar of the house. Lia was even blessed by the elders because her parents believed that it was a way of protecting her from ever getting sick. If anything, reading this chapter quickly gave me a quick preview of the clash that Lia’s cultural beliefs will have with the American doctors when she gets sick in the future chapters. However, I’m hoping that this book will pick up a little faster and have less history moving forward (being honest lol)…
Sometimes in literature authors display underlying themes or messages. This is shown in Night by ellie wiesel and his appalling experience. In this essay we will idetntify and elaborate on these instances exhibited throughout novel. One theme displayed by wiesel is hope. This is shown by Ellie himself,ellie always had hope that he might get saved, which contibuted to his survival.…
Holding Up The Universe by Jennifer Niven is a fiction drama, that also includes romance. The main character Libby Strout, returns to high school after being the talk of the town and labeled America's Fattest Teen. Whilst dealing with the death of her mother and taking care of her father, she now has to deal with the added pressure of Martin Van Buren High School. Besides being the hottest topic in school, Jack Masselin and his friends pulling a prank, ending with both serving in detention. Through having to interact with one another in skill building exercises, they begin to grow closer despite how they first met.…
Picture being displaced in a country you know little about except for the fact that it’s safer than yours. You and your three children have successfully escaped persecution and are subsisting off of government aid. However, you don’t understand the Native language and you differ tremendously when it comes to cultural beliefs. You do know that when anyone is ill, it is because their soul is out of balance with their body, but the Natives in this country constantly resort to temples for intimate examinations that you consider taboo. When the Natives do receive medicine though, they typically get worse, but the doctor just prescribes more medicine. Then one day, one of your beloved children attends a mandatory examination and is diagnosed with cancer.…
The protagonist is Ruby Turpin, "a respectable, hard-working, church-going woman." In her own eyes, Ruby is a "good woman," and her self-satisfaction finds…
Recently I have read the book Unwind, by Neal Shusterman. It takes place in the future, where there is an abundance of children and over population. Because of this issue, the government decided to create a law saying that you can get your child between the ages of thirteen and eighteen “unwound.” This means that a medical professional can surgically remove your body parts, while you’re still alive, but you never feel a thing. This also means that you are alive in pieces.…
As a teenager, We read about YA Literature in and out of school, Reading young adult literature expresses their feelings towards the book. Often, Us teenagers do not like going to our parents and asking for advice, I myself truly enjoy reading it. YA literature uses a wide array of themes as Sexuality, Depression, Drugs & Alcohol abuse, etc. Most teenagers go through a phase where they start doing drugs, and alcohol, Which sometimes turn into a bad error in their life. Some of us all don’t agree on the topic of YA literature, Some likes YA literature while others believes that it ruins teenagers.…
As you read through this short story written by Joyce Carol Oates, you will read about the story of a normal teenage girl, Connie, that loves to believe that she is far more mature than she really is. Her maturity that she longs for throughout the story is then forced upon her and, then her true colors show. They show that no matter how mature she thinks she is, she is still pretty far from full adulthood and is well in the middle of adolescence. Fantasy against reality is what is really going on with Connie.…
Susan Pfeffer’s story “Ashes” teaches a lesson about how trust is decided on past, not relationships. Ashleigh, “Ashes”, with divorced parents, talks about how when she is with her dad, the sun shines just a little bit brighter, but according to her mother, he is just an “irresponsible bum”. Ashes was a nickname her father gave her, which her mother hates. Ashes, says that her father hardly ever keeps a promise, such as when she was a kid, he told her that the stars were her necklace. One lesson the story suggests is that parent-child relationships can quickly change, depending on the choices they make.…
Dystopian Novel Essay Society is divided into castes or groups with specialized functions. This theme can be supported in the novel Unwind by Neal Shusterman, by all the different groups there are like, Tithes and fatigues. These castes take place in a Dystopian world in which instead of abortion people are unwound in between the ages of 13-18. To be unwound you are kept alive but your all your body parts go to people that need them. Throughout the book the many diverse groups that make up society hold different functions each created as a direct result of unwinding.…
Memory is used as a powerful conduit into the past; childhood experiences held in the subconscious illuminate an adult’s perception. Harwood uses tense shifts throughout her poetry to emphasise and indicate the interweaving and connection the past and the present hold. By allowing this examination of the childhood memories, Harwood identifies that their significance is that of an everlasting memory that will dominate over time’s continuity and the inevitability of death.…
Fast Food Companies, such as McDonald’s, are becoming more unethical with their business practices. It is logical for businesses to make profit there should be some accountability as to the morality of such practices. Our research question states is McDonalds holding up to business ethics?…