In The After is about a girl named Amy who is surviving in a post-apocalyptic world of Floraes (or as she calls them at the beginning, Them.), throughout the book she is faced with a number of conflicts, with the Floraes, other survivors/people, and even herself at times. Some of those conflicts are having to adapt to living in the After, dealing with the Floraes, how more than likely all her loved ones are dead, keeping herself and Baby alive, etc. These conflicts slowly shape her from how she is at the beginning of the book to the end of the book, and show the ranges of reactions she has to these situations, which can vary from apathetic and stoic to emotional and panicked. In the beginning of In The After, Amy repeatedly shows a good impulse
In conclusion, the story describes that life changes, and nothing stays the same throughout it. It is in the hands of the people to decide that how they want their life to be. They can make it as beautiful as they want to and they can also make it worse than it has ever been
At the beginning of the story, Amy is a gangly and awkward pre-teen, not caring what others think, playing in mud, and painting on her skin with the blue clay from the creek. As summer comes to an end, Amy stops dressing in her grungy t-shirts and cut off jean shorts, and more like her popular preppy friends at school, as it is more important to her that she wears what her friends wear, rather than what she likes to wear. At school, all of her friends’ names end with an “i”, so hers changes to
The novel goes through a couple of settings such as, Philip's struggle to keep his family alive, and the conflict between the nature of a nuclear bomb against the Los Angeles area. When the bomb hits he is playing around in a playroom shelter with his brother and his girlfriend. They go out to find out what had happened and found burning houses, their house only left with one wall, rubble on the ground, debris all over the place, and people running frantically for shelter. Philip's brother became sick after finding his mother and bringing her back down to the shelter, and found that his mother had been burnt severely and needed immediate medical attention. Philip struggles to keep his brother from getting even more sick than he was and to bring his mother to a hospital. Philip's family weren't the only people affected by the bomb. the entire surrounding area of Los Angeles was pounded by a devastating bomb. Churches, Hospitals, and streets were flooded with sick, dying, and even dead people. Hospitals that were built to only withstand 200 people now have thousands, and hospitals lack food, doctors, and water.
Overall, the play Afterimage shows the difference of being socially isolated versus the importance of being a part of a family. It also shows the appearance of how truthfulness plays a major role in families, because without it, there might be trouble that occurs. Through the use of tropology and the characters, the message of how being a part of a family is much more important than being accepted socially is also portrayed. Robert Chafe was able to illustrate a clear picture into the readers head through the thoughts, actions and the events that the characters went through to show how being socially isolated is nothing compared to having a family that you can rely on.
Throughout the novel, crucial family members and friends of the girl that died are meticulously reshaped by her absence. Lindsey, the sister, outgrows her timidity and develops a brave, fearless demeanor, while at the same time she glows with independence. Abigail, the mother, frees herself from the barbed wire that protected her loved ones yet caused her great pain, as well as learns that withdrawing oneself from their role in society may be the most favorable choice. Ruth, the remote friend from school, determines her career that will last a lifetime. and escapes from the dark place that she was drowning in before. Thus, next time one is overcome with grief, they must remember that constructive change is guaranteed to
In the novel Missing Sarah by Maggie deVries she writes and illustrates a sad tribute to the memory of her sister, Sarah. The author Maggie deVries makes a clear connection between Sarah's adoption by her family and Sarah's incredibly sad life. Adoption of children from another background, heritage and race into white families sometimes doesn't go well, despite the best efforts of the family. Sarah deVries was one of at least 21 women who could only be identified by DNA found on a pig farm in Port Coquitlam, BC. The women were all sex workers or prostitutes who were killed, and the cause of their vanishing was not investigated promptly possibly because they were engaged in selling sex to survive. Even the choice of whether to refer to these women as 'prostitutes' or 'sex
Presumably, complications start to revolve around the protagonist family. Additionally, readers learn that Rachel mother Nella left her biological father for another man who is abusive and arrogant. After,
In the novel excerpt “Two kinds,” Amy Tan uses the central conflict to develop the theme through the clash of cultural identities. Tan shows the reader how culture is dynamic in each individual person. Culture can be mixed and change over time.
The novel begins with the protagonist, April Wheeler, portraying Gabrielle in an amateur-theatre production of the play, The Petrified Forest. The play ends up being a total disaster and leaves April devastated, leaving her disconnected from Frank, her husband, and her neighbors, Milly and Shep Campbell afterwards. The play, The Petrified Forest, is a disastrous love story of a man who decides to have himself die to keep the women he loves out of a life of misery. In the end of The Petrified Forest, Gabrielle is able to escape from her horrible lifestyle and fulfill her dreams; April was never able to do that.
... emotional and mental growth from what happened to her through her artwork. Like Melinda had said in the book, she had gone through different phases in her art pictures from ones with dead, leafless trees to trees with cubism and beautiful leaves and branches. This shows her growth and recovery from what happened that night at the party. In the end, as this relates to Melinda, life is like a tree. You start off a little seed and then become a sprout. You learn from your mistakes and life lessons and begin to grow into a tall, strong, and mighty tree wear no one can harm or stop you from being yourself.
That is when her life was complete. Because all of that has been taken away from her, she is able to experience and feel many different things that she has never experienced before in the Republic of Gilead.... ... middle of paper ... ...
Throughout the novel, the author illuminates the larger meaning of the work by connecting all of the events that occur to the characters to her whole life. This novel, in a sense, is a memoir of Tan’s life, because she connects all of the personal details to herself. Tan herself shows that in her own life, the themes of familial relationships and lack of communication have consistently shown up, from Precious Auntie’s own suicidal thoughts, to the difficulty of settling in a country you know a meager amount about. While in China, superstition, tragedy, traditional values, and “the old,” are the eccentric to America's “new beginning,” modern, and voicelessness. Whether the instances are flashbacks or mere foreshadowing, Amy Tan is able to aid the reader in unraveling the “secrets” of the novel. LuLing is Tan’s orchid: “delicate, but thrived on
As original ideas in literature and film are starting to become a dying breed, writers are now giving characters with traditional roles very untraditional characteristics. In the novel After the Woods, Kim Savage, the author of the story, incorporates a very contemporary type of character known as an antihero. Often either hated or loved by reader, the antihero is a protagonist in a story whose characteristics are seen by many as selfish and crude. These characteristics include a diminished sense of morality, cowardice, and very strong sense of self-interest. The antihero in the novel After the Woods is Liv, the more self-centered of the two female, teenage protagonists. In this response paper I will attempt to explain why readers such as myself take such liking to such a controversial and morally ugly character.
Amy was born in Enfield, London, in England September 14, 1983. She was raised into a culturally jewish family, but they didn’t consider themselves religious. Amy’s mother was Janis Winehouse, she was a pharmacist. Her father was Mitchell Winehouse. He was a part-time taxi driver. Amy also had an older sibling, Alex. He helped his mother around the house with Amy, at the young age of only four. Growing up in Southgate was rough for Amy and Alex. Amy’s uncles who were professional jazz musicians, she wanted to follow in their footsteps.