Kurt Vonnegut‚ Jr. (November 11‚ 1922 – April 11‚ 2007) – an American writer‚ was born in Indianapolis‚ Indiana. After serving in a World War II combat unit‚ he worked as a police reporter. Marked by wry black humor‚ Vonnegut’s satirical‚ pessimistic‚ and morally urgent novels frequently protest the horrors of the 20th century‚ as in the best-selling Slaughterhouse-Five (1969; film‚ 1972). His fiction spoke with particular forcefulness to the generation that came of age in the 1960s and 70s. Vonnegut’s
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Edith Wharton’s "The House of Mirth" mainly describes the need of a woman to be married to a wealthy man and how she attempts to find the most appropriate suitor. "The House of Mirth" also observes the tedious physical and mental decline of a young woman who‚ because of her own weakness and indecisiveness‚ falls from social distinction into poverty and griminess. The story presents a cruel measure of reality and ends quite sadly. Instead of marrying and living happily‚ Lily weakens slowly and commits
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In the short story‚ “Daisy Miller”‚ by Edith Wharton‚ a common obsession is found with the status and respectability of the characters presented in the story. Edith develops this obsession as a theme that is supported by European and American ideals‚ character’s viewpoints‚ and character’s actions in the story “Daisy Miller”. The theme of status and respectability is largely developed by the ideals of the society found within Daisy Miller. The story originates in Switzerland and then later
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The Relevance of Flowers in The Age of Innocence In the book The Age of Innocence‚ Edith Wharton shows the struggles of a man to choose between the safety that following social rules provides‚ and the adventurous dangers of choosing what is regarded as "morally incorrect." The purity and security of social conventions is represented by the lilies-of-the-valley. In the language of flowers these lilies are the embodiment of the "[r]eturn of happiness" (354)‚ and therefore serve as a symbol for the
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One can not escape life and it’s hardships. Every day‚ people experience isolation and bitter circumstances just as the main character in the novel Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton had. Ethan‚ like most people‚ had dreams. But upon an unfortunate series of events he saw those dreams shatter and break like fine china on a cold‚ stone floor. It prevented him from leaving his life of misery‚ hardship‚ and vain efforts. This only fueled his burning desire for freedom and an escape from fate. His conflict
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she would usually write about Peter Van Pels because he was the only other boy in the apartment that was her age. She started to have feelings toward him. Nobody knows if he ever liked Anne Frank back. Anne Frank would also always have fights with Edith Frank because she was always a daddy’s girl. Even though she expressed this type of information‚ Anne Frank wrote with maturity. She especially showed maturity when writing about the war. When Anne Frank wrote and read‚ her diary there was no
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I am writing to you in hopes that whatever I tell you this day might persuade you to look further more into the problem of daycare facilities not having certified nurses. I believe that daycare facilities should have certified nurses because children are more delicate and need more special care. Children cannot treat themselves they need assistance from someone who knows what they are doing. A problem is training nurses how to properly take care of children when the children’s bodies are still
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CRITICA ESSAY #1 Jeffrey M. Lilburn‚ M.A (The University of Western Ontario) is the author of a study guide on Margaret Atwood’s The Edible Woman and of numerous educational essays. In the following essay‚ he discusses the narrative and moral ambiguity in Ethan Frome First published in 1911‚ Ethan Frome is now considered a classic of twentieth-century American literature. A tale of lost opportunity‚ failed romance and disappointed dreams ending with a botched suicide attempt that leaves two people
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Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream The Dharma Bums On the Road Hunter S. Thompson Jack Kerouac Jack Kerouac Malcolm X and Alex Haley Tom Wolfe Alex Haley Ayn Rand Ayn Rand Bernard Malamud E.L. Doctorow Edith Wharton Edith Wharton F. Scott Fitzgerald F. Scott Fitzgerald Herman Melville James Baldwin James Weldon Johnson The Autobiography of Malcolm X The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test Roots The Fountainhead Atlas Shrugged The Natural Ragtime The Age of Innocence The
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Literary realism is the trend‚ beginning with mid nineteenth-century French literature and extending to late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century authors‚ towards depictions of contemporary life and society as it was‚ or is. In the spirit of general "realism‚" Realist authors opted for depictions of everyday and banal activities and experiences‚ instead of a romanticized or similarly stylized presentation. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_realism Realism Even though there are rumblings
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