What does success mean? Success can be defined as, “the gaining of wealth, respect, or fame”, according to Merriam-Webster dictionary. Everyone has different ideas on what success is and how to become successful. In this Essay I’ll be comparing how two authors think success is achieved. Paul Tough and Michael Lewis has completely different ideas on how success is achieved.…
The Boy Who Dared, by Susan Bartoletti, is simply about a boy named Helmuth Hübener who dared to speak out against Hitler and the Nazi party. Helmuth was a German youth who has to find his way in an entirely different world. The novel is told in flashbacks as Helmuth looks back on his life from a Nazi prison. A few very distinctive traits stand out in Helmuth. Three examples were intelligence, bravery and leadership.…
Today’s Taste of Medicine of the Civil War During the Civil War, many soldiers die or wounded because their hospital is not like our these day. They were treated different and they were located out in the open. Our taste in medicine is nothing compare the time of the civil war.…
This one uses personification to give the reader the clue that the weather is freezing temperatures and cold. This leaves us with either a playful tone, since we can assume that it is winter and children are playing, or a tone of solitude since with colder weather comes less people out and about. Another example of a literary element is this quote; “... Housewives lumbering like great black bears in their furs along the icy…
The novel A Bridge To Wiseman’s Cove by James Moloney explores the difficulties and hardships Carl Matt experiences which then later results in him growing as a character through relationships and conflicts. Carl has created relationships and bonds with many individuals who have some how contributed in conflicts and consequences throughout his journey in Wiseman’s Cove. The only way Carl grew was from his many conflicts and arguments with other individuals in the novel, most of these leading to a better and happier result. Carl also had to face some of the fears he doesn’t like discussing. Like the question about whether or not Sarah or Kerry would return to himself and Harley.…
Chris McCandless, a.k.a. Alex Supertramp, was a man who decided to abandon the usual materialistic lifestyle to search for the actual meaning of life while roaming in the margins of society and in nature. In 1992, he met his end after living alone for months in the wilderness of Alaska. A few years later, Jon Krakauer decided to tell his story through the book Into the Wild, which was written based on interviews with family members and people who Chris met through his voyage, as well as on a journal he kept. Alternatively, in the novel Disgrace, J. M. Coetzee writes the story of David Lurie, a fictional character, and allows the readers to have a great insight into his personality and thoughts, but only assumptions regarding the intentions…
Do you really know what is in the meat that we eat? Eric Schlosser has written a book on the process of meat packing plants that begs the question (Fast Food Nation). His work bears a remarkable similarity to Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle written almost one hundred years ago. Schlosser wrote his book from a different approach but contains shocking information of how our meat is still processed today.…
In the short story, "The Secret Lion", author Alberto Rios eloquently portrays the awkwardness of the teen years through the perspective of two boys, both age twelve. Despite their frustration with adults, both boys see the world as a mysterious and wonderful place, as their own plane of existence. They enjoy spending time near the neighboring arroyo, where they shout dirty words and yell about their teachers. In reference to this, the narrator says, "it just felt good and for the first time in our lives there was nobody to tell us we couldn't" (Rios 1). Both boys feel neglected and pushed down by adults, and they feel as if adults are taking their childlike perspective away.…
Gothic literature applies to all works of writing with dark and chilling elements much like Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs. Gothic elements such as loss, monsters, and psychological issues are connected to Riggs’ novel, but also to well-known gothic short stories like “The Raven”, “The Black Cat”, by Edgar Allan Poe, and “The Feather Pillow” by Horacio Quiroga. For example, the famous poem “The Raven,” by Edgar Allan Poe, and Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, by Ransom Riggs, share the same gothic element of loss. In “The Raven,” the man in the story pours “sorrow for the lost Lenore.”…
Guns, germs and steel Conquest has shaped modern history. The secret to their quest is guns, germs and steel, leaving the European in domination. How is it that Europeans where the ones with all of the advantages? Jared diamond set out to answer this question…
The Pigman by Paul Zindel is a funny, well written book and should be read by middle schoolers. The Pigman takes place in Staten Island over a course of a year, at the graveyard, the zoo, Mr. Pignati's house, and Lorraine’s house. John and Lorraine are 16 year old sophomores in high school. They are struggling to keep a reputation of charity workers when with Mr. Pignati. (The Pigman) When John, Lorraine, and their friends call was charity workers to Mr. Pignati’s House, he answers and agrees to give money if they pick the money up from his house.…
I read Sitting Bull: Champion of the Sioux by Stanley Vestal, Sitting Bull was a Hunkpapa Lakota Leader that wouldn't back down from the war. While reading Sitting Bull Champion of the Sioux I found a variety of things that I could compare to but I also found things that aren't similar. The biggest thing that I found that wasn’t similar was the fact that he was a man of his word if I were to say that I'm going to do something I wouldn’t do it but Sitting Bull would. There were countless parts of the book that showed Sitting Bull was a Warrior some may beg a differ but in my eyes, he was a Warrior and someone to look up to. Sitting Bull…
More than 2 in 3 adults and about one-third of children are considered to be overweight or obese. In his article “What You Eat Is Your Business,” Radley Balko claims the idea that we should take responsibility of what we eat instead of blaming the government for it. Balko argues that the way the government is spending a lot of money for anti obesity measure isn’t the right approach to prevent obesity. In contrast, in David Zinczenko’s article “Don’t Blame The Eater,” he insists how the fast food industries are to be blamed for the problem of obesity in America. He explains how the rate of diabetes in children has dramatically increased because of the negative effects of the fast food restaurants.…
One of which was J.D. Salinger. New to writing Salinger did not know where to go, so he decided to start by reading some of the greats. Fitzgerald and Hemingway were his favorites. “As he developed as a writer Salinger came to see himself as following in Fitzgerald’s footsteps” (Gabriel). Salinger was not the only writer to notice this, many other authors aspired to be like Fitzgerald because he left such a legacy in literature.…
Similar to The Rorschach Test – a famed psychological inkblot test that means different things to different people – Steven Hall's The Raw Shark Texts can be interpreted in a number of unique ways. It tells a purposely ambiguous, experimental, and daring story that forces readers to question their preconceived notions between knowledge, love, identity, and insanity. The Raw Shark Texts is a flawless example of how emotional trauma triggers psychosis, as well as how losing a loved one disturbs a broken heart. In The Raw Shark Texts, the reader encounters "Eric Sanderson One" and "Eric Sanderson Two" whose ideas live on post-metaphorical death, and eventual literal death.…