The novel Keeper’n Me was written by Richard Wagamese and first published in 1994. It was later published in Canada in 2006. The novel is about a man named Garnet Raven who was taken away from his parents and the Ojibway way of life when he was three, and put into various foster homes and forced into the white way of life. When he was around 20 he ended up doing something that got him thrown into jail. While in jail, Garnet received a letter from his Ojibway family and decided to return to his first home, White Dog, once he got out of jail. Once he returned to White Dog, Garnet started to learn many things from his family, friends, and a man named Keeper. He discovered a sense of place, and self, and started to make his way back into the Ojibway
In Phillip Lopate’s, “Writing Personal Essays: On the Necessity of Turning yourself into a Character” he explains how bringing ‘I’ to an essay is okay as long as you do it in a creative way and make yourself into a character while writing. He brings his own creativity into his writing about how you can turn yourself into a character and tells the reader the right ways and the wrong ways of doing so. He also persuades the reader that it is okay to put ‘I’ in an essay who was possibly taught not to use ‘I’ in an essay
Throughout life people encounter a numerous amount of obstacles, some of these obstacles can be tougher than others. These obstacles don’t define who you are, how the situation is handled does. In the book The Running Dream by Wendelin Van Draanen, Jessica encounters a tremendous obstacle that life could throw at her. Jessica has had to learn to adjust her life from the way that she used to live. Her life is changing and she has to decide if this accident defines who she is going to be while being surrounded by the love and comfort of her family.
[Name] [Professor] [Subject] [Date] Amy Bloom's "Hold Tight" Some writers are born to give stories that intrigue and touch from beneath in the heart. Amy Bloom’s collection of short stories in her book “A blind man can see how much I love you” is a clear depiction of love and loss, of suffering and of endurance, and of struggles and survivals. One of her stories “Hold Tight” gives the readers insight in to the effects and influences of a the sickness of a mother on her daughter. The terminal illness may bring her death, but that may also bring about suffering of implacable nature in others that surround and comfort her. It is asserted that the vitality of the “mother's painting, "Lot's Wife", in Amy Bloom's "Hold Tight" can be compared to the meaning associated with Anna Ahkmatova's poem "Lot's Wife" in the sense that both women find importance in the destroyed city of Sodom, the physical pain of dying, and the story of Lot's wife herself. The destroyed city of Sodom is significant to both Amy Bloom and Anna Ahkmatova because it symbolizes the destroyed lives of the mother and of Lot's wife. In "Hold Tight" the portion of the mother's painting that is the destroyed city of Sodom is described by Amy Bloom as "bright and grim, were the sticky little flames of the destroyed city, nothing, not even rubble, around it." This is symbolic of the Mother's destroyed life because she was dying and her husband and daughter were becoming more dysfunctional the closer to dying she became. Bloom writes "more often than not, we'd end up back in the brown fog of his study, me taking a last few puffs with my legs thrown over his big leather armchair, my father sipping his bourbon and staring out at the backyard." The husband and daughter are dealin...
Ownership is a symbol of control. As human beings, we tend to put labels on things, believing that everything must belong to someone or something. This issue of ownership does not exclude the world of fairy tales. Fairy tales, much like birds, follow no rules and are free, but can be over ruled by potential superiors. In Donald Haase’s essay entitled, “Yours, Mine, or Ours?” and Lawrence R. Sipe’s case study, “Talking back and taking over: Young children’s expressive engagement during storybook read-alouds”, both scholars claim that children holds the baton of ownership over fairy tales. Although Haase and Sipe lay out an appealing theory and practice for children’s literacy, a story like “The Juniper Tree” by the Grimms brothers suggest skepticism
A Stolen Life by Jaycee Lee Dugard is an autobiography recounting the chilling memories that make up the author’s past. She abducted when she was eleven years old by a man named Phillip Garrido with the help of his wife Nancy. “I was kept in a backyard and not allowed to say my own name,” (Dugard ix). She began her life relatively normally. She had a wonderful loving mother, a beautiful baby sister,, and some really good friends at school. Her outlook on life was bright until June 10th, 1991, the day of her abduction. The story was published a little while after her liberation from the backyard nightmare. She attended multiple therapy sessions to help her cope before she had the courage to share her amazing story. For example she says, “My growth has not been an overnight phenomenon…it has slowly and surely come about,” (D 261). She finally began to put the pieces of her life back together and decided to go a leap further and reach out to other families in similar situations. She has founded the J A Y C Foundation or Just Ask Yourself to Care. One of her goals was, amazingly, to ensure that other families have the help that they need. Another motive for writing the book may have also been to become a concrete form of closure for Miss Dugard and her family. It shows her amazing recovery while also retelling of all of the hardships she had to endure and overcome. She also writes the memoir in a very powerful and curious way. She writes with very simple language and sentence structures. This becomes a constant reminder for the reader that she was a very young girl when she was taken. She was stripped of the knowledge many people take for granted. She writes for her last level of education. She also describes all of the even...
... within the prison society. The author uses the book to help women in the prison society and outside the enclosed walls find themselves.
“The Lanyard”, by Billy Collins is a poem about the love of a mother and the love of a child. The main character, presently an adult male, speaks of his mother and his childhood memories of her. The focal memory of the character is a lanyard he made for his mother. Collins explains how the boy's simple gift, the lanyard, which symbolizes love, was enough to recompense her service of motherhood at a young age and presently how his words are enough compensation for her lifelong unconditional love.
In the featured article, “Beside Oneself: On the Limits of Sexual Autonomy,” the author, Judith Butler, writes about her views on what it means to be considered human in society. Butler describes to us the importance of connecting with others helps us obtain the faculties to feel, and become intimate through our will to become vulnerable. Butler contends that with the power of vulnerability, the rolls pertaining to humanity, grief, and violence, are what allows us to be acknowledged as worthy.
While it may be easier to persuade yourself that Boo’s published stories are works of fiction, her writings of the slums that surround the luxury hotels of Mumbai’s airport are very, very real. Katherine Boo’s book “Behind the Beautiful Forevers – Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity” does not attempt to solve problems or be an expert on social policy; instead, Boo provides the reader with an objective window into the battles between extremities of wealth and poverty. “Behind the Beautiful Forevers,” then, exposes the paucity and corruption prevalent within India.
Many people think that reading more can help them to think and develop before writing something. Others might think that they don’t need to read and or write that it can really help them to brainstorm things a lot quicker and to develop their own ideas immediately (right away). The author’s purpose of Stephen King’s essay, Reading to Write, is to understand the concepts, strategies and understandings of how to always read first and then start something. The importance of this essay is to understand and comprehend our reading and writing skills by brainstorming our ideas and thoughts a lot quicker. In other words, we must always try to read first before we can brainstorm some ideas and to think before we write something. There are many reasons why I chose Stephen King’s essay, Reading to Write, by many ways that reading can help you to comprehend, writing, can help you to evaluate and summarize things after reading a passage, if you read, it can help you to write things better and as you read, it can help you to think and evaluate of what to write about.
In Me, Myself and Them: A Firsthand Account of One Young Person’s Experience with Schizophrenia (2007), Kurt Snyder provides his personal narrative of living with Schizophrenia with Dr. Raquel Gur and Linda Andrews offering professional insight into the disease. This book gives remarkable insight into the terrifying world of acute psychosis, where reality cannot be distinguished from delusion and recovery is grueling. However, Snyder’s account does offer hope that one may live a content and functional life despite a debilitating, enduring disease.
In the book Between the World and Me written by Ta-Nehisi Coates, Coates composes his book as a letter form to his fifteen year old son distilling the notion of what is is like to live in contemporary America as a black person. Ta-Nehisi Coates is unravelling his argument by incorporating personal experiences before and during fatherhood, also including his son’s experiences and young men such as Michael Brown whose death has brought awareness of the dangers of living in America as a black person. Coates is desperate to raise his son in a different manner than most black parents have been doing for the past years. He is not going to give his son false hope.
In the short story “The Cheater’s Guide to Love” by Junot Diaz, the author pinpoints on the Yunior’s life as a writer and college professor who is also struggling with his romantic relationships. The short story is filled with his experiences of using women for his beneficial needs and how it negatively affects him. It focuses on Yunior’s downfall through life after the destruction of his relationship with his fiance. The diction includes the narrator’s hateful consideration of women and a paradox of his own endeavors which prevent him from pursuing a meaningful relationship, but he grows to realize that he treats women awfully and his ex did the right thing by leaving him due to his untruthfulness.
“Lose Yourself” is one of the most famous and prominent songs of Eminem’s whole career. This song is meant to pump someone up when they are feeling down and out and to tell them to seize every opportunity that comes their way because it might me the last one. This song is the main track that relates to Marshall Mathers’ semi-biographical movie 8 Mile as this portrays his story of his entry into the rap game.
Finders Keepers is a novel that follows a series of characters that all have their own importance to the story of a famous writer's unpublished works. John Rothstein, a famous american author, has been murdered and robbed by Morris Bellamy who vengefully seeks the alleged unpublished Jimmy Gold book remaining from the series. Morris thoughtfully hides his treasures before he is arrested and sentenced to life for an unrelated crime. Decades later, a young Peter Saubers stumbles upon this stolen loot and decides to keep it a secret. After many years, Peter finds himself trying to sell the extremely worthy literature, at the very same time Morris is released from jail on parole. Bill Hodges and his assistant Holly Gibney are tasked