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Analysis of 'Dead Girls Don't Lie
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The book “Dead Girls Don’t Lie” written by Jennifer Shaw Wolf focuses on a variety of different ideas and topics, mostly fixating the murder of the main character’s best friend Rachel. With this also comes gang violence, lost and found relationships, and the fact that some people will go to great extents in order to keep a lethal secret from the public eye. Rachel and Jaycee were best friends up until 6 months before where the book started. But, an altercation between them caused the breakup of their long lasted friendship. It is soon found out that Rachel was shot through her bedroom window, which is at first suspected to be gang violence. When Jaycee doesn’t answer her phone on the night Rachel was murdered, she received a text that circulates …show more content…
Some of those include Eduardo, Rachel’s old friend, Rachel herself, Manuel, the other person who was killed, and Evan and Skyler Cross, football playing brothers that are friends with Jaycee. Eduardo is the only person that Rachel says Jaycee can trust, which is the one-hundred percent truth. Jaycee starts to believe that she can trust the Cross brothers, but that is proved to be untrue. It turns out that the death of Manny and Rachel were considered accidents, but that is open for interpretation from the reader. Manny was killed the night Rachel and Jaycee snuck into the old house, when the football team was doing the “making the cut” initiation. This means that when in order to prove your loyalty to the football team, you have to carve your jersey number somewhere on your skin. The night Manny was supposed to prove his self worth is also the night that he fell on a knife and died. Nobody wanted him to die, it was just a freak accident caused by tension between Manny and Skyler. The fate of the football team was so important to this group of guys that they would blame a unsuspecting gang of killing poor Manny. Rachel unluckily walked up the stairs of the old house they were doing the initiation in that night and saw everything. The only way to shut her up was to kill her, and that’s exactly what happened. The fluctuating personalities of the characters in this book is what really helps drive the story towards success. Skyler, the one who killed Manny and was a contributor to the death of Rachel starts off as an innocent pretty-boy. At the end of the story, he turns out to be a danger to himself and those around him. “‘You will never have to see him again. The judge has decided he’s too mentally unstable to stand trial. As soon as he’s recovered from his injuries he’ll go into some sort of mental facility for children’” (Wolf 344). Many characters also change, in some ways
In this fast-paced novel, Cass Shipton and her circle of friends are called in to find a local family that has mysteriously gone missing. Desperate to find the missing family, they find the trail points to a vicious killer with a violent past. Between Cassandra’s circle of devoted friends, her booming herbalist venture and the wants of Scruffy her eccentric mutt, she finds her hands quite full. Things become worse when she has to take in a troublesome teenager. Winifred “Freddie” McGinty comes into Cassandras life bringing along a whole lot of chaos to complicate her
In 1776, David McCullough gives a vivid portrayal of the Continental Army from October 1775 through January 1777, with sharp focus on the leadership of America’s greatest hero, George Washington. McCullough’s thesis is that had not the right man (George Washington) been leading the Continental Army in 1776, the American Revolution would have resulted in a vastly different outcome. He supports his argument with a critical analysis of Washington’s leadership during the period from the Siege of Boston, through the disastrous defense of New York City, the desperate yet, well ordered retreat through New Jersey against overwhelming odds, and concludes with the inspiring victories of Trenton and Princeton. By keeping his army intact and persevering through 1776, Washington demonstrated to the British Army that the Continental Army was not simply a gang of rabble, but a viable fighting force. Additionally, Mr. McCullough supports his premise that the key to the survival of the American Revolution was not in the defense of Boston, New York City, or any other vital terrain, but rather the survival of the Continental Army itself. A masterful piece of history, 1776 is not a dry retelling of the Revolutionary War, but a compelling character study of George Washington, as well as his key lieutenants, and his British adversaries, the most powerful Army in the 18th Century world. When I read this book, I went from a casual understanding of the hero George Washington to a more specific understanding of why Washington was quite literally the exact right man at the exact right place and time to enable the birth of the United States.
It's the middle of the night, Charlie is sweaty and hot, and he can't fall asleep... But suddenly there's a pound on his window. Terrified, Charlie can't bear to turn around and look to see what it is, but he musters the courage to look at his window. At the front of his window Jasper Jones, the kid with the worst reputation in Corrigan, is at Charlie's house in the middle of the dark night. Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey was a suspenseful and a nerve racking book, it starts out when Jasper comes to show Charlie Laura's dead body in the middle of the night, most of the book Charlie and Jasper try to keep this murder a secret and also try to figure out the killer. Charlie changes a lot throughout the book and gets a girlfriend along the way. He shows the most courage in the book Jasper Jones for many reasons, he keeps Laura's murder a secret from everyone, he musters enough courage in him to talk and flirt with Laura's sister Eliza, and he also keeps pushing through life when his mom leaves him.
Throughout the novel the characters are put in these situations which force them to obtain information about the people they thought they knew. The center of finding out who everyone is was brought into play through the death of Marie. The story is told by David, only twelve years old, who sees his family an community in a different light for who they truly are under there cover. By doing his own little investigations, often times eavesdropping, David saw through the lies, secures and betrayals to find the truth.
...of you with all her deepest opinions about every event the book contained. Cassie, as an innocent rose, was naive until the day she has experienced racism, or as the day where the innocent rose has grown thrones. Her innocence was gone as she stated that that day was the worst day of her entire life. Cassie hasn’t understood many things of why they had to live differently than others, of why Mr. Simms and other whites treated her the way they did, she hasn’t completely understood all that until the day where Mama was faced with no choice, but to explain it to her. Cassie sneaking and attentively listening to conversations she wasn’t supposed to hear provided the readers with additional information and informed readers how hard times where for the family.
Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson, is a story written in the first person about a young girl named Melinda Sordino. The title of the book, Speak, is ironically based on the fact that Melinda chooses not to speak. The book is written in the form of a monologue in the mind of Melinda, a teenage introvert. This story depicts the story of a very miserable freshman year of high school. Although there are several people in her high school, Melinda secludes herself from them all. There are several people in her school that used to be her friend in middle school, but not anymore. Not after what she did over the summer. What she did was call the cops on an end of summer party on of her friends was throwing. Although all her classmates think there was no reason to call, only Melinda knows the real reason. Even if they cared to know the real reason, there is no way she could tell them. A personal rape story is not something that flows freely off the tongue. Throughout the story Melinda describes the pain she is going through every day as a result of her rape. The rape of a teenage girl often leads to depression. Melinda is convinced that nobody understands her, nor would they even if they knew what happened that summer. Once a happy girl, Melinda is now depressed and withdrawn from the world. She hardly ever speaks, nor does she do well in school. She bites her lips and her nails until they bleed. Her parents seem to think she is just going through a faze, but little do they know, their daughter has undergone a life changing trauma that will affect her life forever.
The plot of the book, Speak is that Melinda Sordino, a freshman at Merryweather High went to an end of the summer party with some of her friends. Things take a turn for the worst when a senior named Andy Evans sexually assaults her at the party without her friends knowing about it. Melinda is frightened, afraid, and does not know what to do so she calls 911 busting the party, and causing her friends and everyone at that school to hate her, even if they don’t know her.
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,
Markus Zusak reads as, Death, he watches over everyone during the time of World War Two, taking souls when the time comes for them to be set free. He tells us a little inside scoop of what's going on in the destruction that was happening outside of Liesel's story.
stands out was on the last expedition when Roberto Canessa and Nando Parrado set off
Death and Grieving Imagine that the person you love most in the world dies. How would you cope with the loss? Death and grieving is an agonizing and inevitable part of life. No one is immune from death’s insidious and frigid grip. Individuals vary in their emotional reactions to loss.
There are many reasons why authors of young adult fiction write character deaths in their novels. In their article “Death and Dying in Young Adult Fiction” Carolyn Harvey and Frances Dowd state, “Reading about the death of a fictional character can help adolescents develop a personal code of values, appreciate life more fully, and release feelings of grief or anger that result from the loss of someone close to them” (141). It is not only the readers who benefit in these ways, but also the characters in the novel. In The Outsiders, Johnny’s death helps Ponyboy and the gang clean up their acts and appreciate the fleeting nature of life. Johnny’s death was a catalyst for change in the gang and helped Ponyboy craft his essay and write about the importance of the life of boys like him and Johnny. Ponyboy says, “But it still hurt anyway. You know a guy a long time, and I mean really know him, you don't get used to the idea that he's dead just overnight. Johnny was something more than a buddy to all of us. I guess he had listened to more beefs and more problems from more people than any of us. A guy that'll really listen to you, listen and care about what you're saying, is something rare” (Hinton 151). Johnny’s death was heartbreaking, but necessary. Dally’s death, on the other hand, was excessive. Overcome by grief, he puts himself purposefully in harms way. S.E Hinton did not have to kill Dally off, because Johnny’s death already accomplished her original intentions of personal growth for the Greasers. Adding Dally’s death did not add to the narrative, nor did it achieve anything new for the novel or the characters. Johnny’s death completed the narrative, while Dally’s was simply added for shock value.
This is the first threshold that Cohle crosses on his adventure. He and his partner find the church and a key piece of evidence linking it to the killer they are searching for. This first accomplishment in finding a piece of evidence signifies to the detectives, just as much as the viewer, that the case is progressing.
The assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr. was a very emotional time in our nation's history. This horrifying incident occurred on November 22, 1963, in a motorcade procession in Dallas, Texas. At 12:30 in the afternoon the procession was going down Elm Street in Dealy Plaza, when shots were fired. One struck President Kennedy in the throat and moments later a bullet tore apart his head. At 1:00 p.m., President JFK was pronounced dead. That same afternoon, Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested as a suspect of murder. Oswald however, pleaded his innocence by stating, " I'm just a patsy." This caused many suspicions and questions. Was he a lone assassin? Was he innocent? Was there a conspiracy against the president? These questions called for Lyndon B. Johnson, the new president, to form the Warren Commission specifically to investigate the assassination. It was named for the Chairman, and the Chief Justice of the United States, Earl Warren. This commission, after ten months of investigation, presented their report to President Johnson. The 26 volumes of testimony and exhibits, " overwhelmingly supported the conclusions that the assassination was no conspiracy, but the work of one unhappy man, Lee Harvey Oswald." (New York Times) However many Americans continued to believe there was a conspiracy to assassinate President John F. Kennedy. The book Cover- Up, by Stewart Galanor, is a great description of the facts and fictions of the investigation.
“The Book of the Dead” by Muriel Rukeyser is a great example of Mike Gold’s definition of proletarian literature for many reasons. It also has a few characteristics that differ from Gold’s definition. “The Book of the Dead” is a very long poem describing the Hawks Nest Tunnel disaster that killed thousands of workers in the early twentieth century and their endeavor to seek justice. There are three reasons why this work is an accurate representation of Gold’s proletarian literature. Those reasons are: it is about the worker, relatable to real life, and technical and factual.