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    Sherlock Holmes is hired by a retired art supply dealer from Lewisham‚ Josiah Amberley‚ to look into his wife’s disappearance. She has left with a neighbour‚ Dr. Ray Ernest‚ taking a sizeable quantity of cash and securities. Amberley wants the two tracked down. Holmes is too busy with another case at the moment; so he sends Dr. Watson to Lewisham to observe what he can‚ although Watson is keenly aware that this is more Holmes’s province. He does his best‚ observing that Amberley is busy painting

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    "Censorship is telling a man he can’t have a steak just because a baby can’t chew it." (Mark Twain) Throughout the last hundred years‚ Mark Twain’s famous American novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn has been the center of a heated debate. This argument is centered around the allowance of the book in the curriculum of public schools. Many people from many different interest groups have stated their opinion about the book and the argument‚ presenting various pertinent arguments; however‚ the

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    Excellent Adventure. Chicago Review Press‚ Chicago: 2009. Many former presidents often faded into obscurity and‚ more often than not back then‚ were poor after their presidency. Harry Truman is a prime example of these types of presidents‚ but he did something that set him apart from these other presidents. He took a road trip with his wife on an army pension of just $112.56. Told chronologically and written with a good amount of humor and historical details‚ Harry Truman’s Excellent Adventure by Matthew

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    Stereotypes in „The Little Red Riding Hood“ “Happily ever after” – a saying that might be familiar to almost every person as it is one of the most common endings of fairytales. Especially for children fairytales are a highly influential text type. When reading a fairytale children usually identify some role model and moreover they first come across stereotypes. Every fairytale contains “widely held but fixed and oversimplified image[s] or idea[s] of a particular type of person or thing” (Oxford

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    Adventure If I could go anywhere in the world‚ I would go to Hawaii. Hawaii is a very beautiful place‚ and a great vacation destination. Experiencing the culture of Hawaii would be a wonderful experience. Hawaii would be an amazing adventure and I would learn a lot about Hawaiians culture and way of life. Some of the things I would be interested in are eating the food‚ listening to Hawaiian music‚ and exploring the cities. Learning about Hawaiian culture would allow me to learn what life is like

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    Adventures of Tom Sawyer Test Realism‚ defined by The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language‚ is the representation in art or literature of objects‚ actions‚ or social conditions as they actually are‚ without idealization or presentation in abstract form. In The Adventures of Tom Sawyer‚ Twain portrays an accurate depiction of society during the pre-civil war time. Twain paints a picture of a boy’s world along the Mississippi River‚ where two mischievous boys‚ Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn

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    However‚ in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn‚ Twain ironically violates the same offenses he victimizes Cooper for. “Chapter 17” violates a plethora of these rules‚ a few being allowing miracles or other events to be reasonable and possible‚ characters having a meaningful presence‚ and the avoidance of needless information. Mark Twain states that events‚ even if miracles‚ should be predictable and reasonable‚ through the characters of the book(1433). “Chapter 17” of The Adventures of Huckleberry

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    Alice and Wonderland Stage 1: Call to Adventure At the beginning of the story Alice starts off being pressured into marring a man she doesn’t even love. Her sister tells her to go get married and live just happily ever after like her but her husband is cheating on her. I think Alice’s call was when she kept spotting the white rabbit in the bushes and began to follow him in the middle of getting purposed to. Also after she fell down the hole the rabbit was trying to explain to her who she is

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    Nerissa Sykes Crystal O’Neal English 1102 28 February 2013 No More Sweet Red Riding Hood In the past‚ fairytales were intended mostly for children to learn morals and meanings to things. These fairytales also always ended with a happy ending. As time passed these fairytales have been altered and expanded in ways that draw from what a fairytale really is. Many have argued that these new adaptions of the fairytales have corrupted our children. Others on the other hand‚ gave reasoning on how

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    John Fassero‚ Ethnic Studies 151‚ Fall 2013 Professor Duane Bigeagle Analysis of “Adventures of an Indian Princess”‚ By Patricia Riley The feelings and emotions that make this a powerful and thought-provoking story on stereotyping and general ethnic insensitivity are carried primarily as the author provides you with the internal narrative dialogue and careful observation of a young Cherokee girl named Arletta. Much is communicated without a spoken word by her throughout the essay. Much

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