In the short story “The Last Dog” by Katharine Patterson, a young teen named Brock lived inside of a dome. He was told his whole life that the outside world is contaminated with some sort of disease. He wanted to go out so he put on a suit that kept him safe and he went to explore. He found something and brought it back and the people of the dome wanted to test on it. He wouldn’t let them take it away from him so he left the dome and found something even more interesting. He knew not to trust the people of the dome. The plot of the short story “The Last Dog” Brock a teen who lives in a dome with a community of people feels that the people of the dome are lying to him about the whole world being contaminated. He asked the leader to go outside
so he suited up and explored the suit was for safety. He experiences different emotions he found a dog and named it Brog. He took it back to the dome and they wanted to do test he denied and he got to leave the dome for good. He ends up finding out that what he has been told his whole life that the air is contaminated it’s not it was all a lie. The setting of the story is a young teen inside of a dome in the middle of the contaminated world. The dome is imagined to be a lot of labs for testing the air and different things for the scientist. A living condors and a food place. The outside world would be normal with mountains trees cities. The main characters that you come in conflict with is Brock and Brog the dog come back to the labs in the dome and they want to kill the dog and run tests they are in conflict with the scientists. Brock wanted to leave the dome as he stated “For scientific research”. He left the dome and found different emotions and a dog. He didn’t know what he would find out in the world outside of the dome. Therefore he did it anyway and went back to the dome. He stated it’s alright dog. They got to leave the dome and he found out that the world wasn’t contaminated. What I think about this theme is brock is a little crazy for wanting to go outside. Before he actually knew the world was a non-contaminated place he was crazy for wanting to go outside. He found a dog and brought it back I like the way they set up the story.
Sonya Hartnett’s ‘The Midnight Zoo’ a touching story that explores the effect war had on animals, children and nature. Both human and animal characters speak about their experiences throughout this period. The book tells about how a hunger for power over something that is not owned impacts everybody and leaves innocents caught up in a large mess.
Catherine’s diary takes place during medieval England during 1290. “… Of the Manor of Stonebridge in the shire of Lincoln, in the country of England” (Cushman 164). Birdy lives on a manor and she is the daughter of an English country knight. “… In the year of our Lord 1290” (Cushman 2). “Today I chased a rat about the hall… threw it in the privy” (Cushman 2). Those two citations show the poor sanitary conditions and hygiene. They also used the privy which is a bathroom but is located outside of their home. The social class ranges from a villager to a king, the rich and religious are educated while the poor are not, and the people are Christians.
Feelings are the most significant part of human’s creature, but what if it comes to the goal that one’s life is based on? Would it still be that important? In the article, “Dog Lab”, Claire McCarthy discusses her own experiences as a medical student at Harvard school. McCarthy was born in 1963. She did her residency at Boston’s Children’s Hospital and she is now working as a pediatrician at the Martha Eliot Health Center in the Jamaica Plains. During college, she used to keep a journal with her that provided the outline of her writings which she referred to for her books such as Learning How the Heart Beats: The making of a Pediatrician and Everyone's Children : A Pediatrician's Story of an Inner City Practice. In addition to McCarthy being
The story by Somerville Ross, “Philippa’s Fox Hunt” was set in Ireland. A recently married couple Mr. and Mrs. Yeates were featured adapting to a new environment. The new place was characterized by new social activities that were not common in their previous residence. They had to learn new skills such as riding horses and hunting. Mr. Yeates who narrated the story described his life after marriage and how events had shaped his marriage. At the very beginning I was able to pick an element of symbolism; a newly married couple will naturally start a new life and similarly in the story the couple ventured into a new society where almost everything was new just in the same way when two people get married to each other.
The professor, Deborah Brandt, believes that one becomes literate by their surroundings and not by themselves. In the first paragraph it claims that literacy is not simply about reading and writing, but also how you can use all the knowledge you acquired into real life situations such as solving problems. Brandt claims that sponsors do help out individuals, she also thinks that sponsors have their own goals they are striving for. Although, sponsors are supposed to help out individuals it seems like they pretend to be the protagonist, but are hiding their self-interest at the same time. This makes me question if whether or not my English teacher would actually preparing us for our AP exam or just making us write over and over?
In Unbroken, Laura Hillenbrand tells the life story of Louie Zamperini, a former Olympian, soldier, and survivor of World War ll. The author opens the book by informing the reader of how World War ll was globally developing through the use of a flashback. Then, she begins to introduce the main character, Louie Zamperini, as a child and leads up to show his motivation and survival of World War ll. Hillenbrand uses these flashbacks to provide background information and show the characters motivation.
Louise Erdrich’s short story “American horse” is a literary piece written by an author whose works emphasize the American experience for a multitude of different people from a plethora of various ethnic backgrounds. While Erdrich utilizes a full arsenal of literary elements to better convey this particular story to the reader, perhaps the two most prominent are theme and point of view. At first glance this story seems to portray the struggle of a mother who has her son ripped from her arms by government authorities; however, if the reader simply steps back to analyze the larger picture, the theme becomes clear. It is important to understand the backgrounds of both the protagonist and antagonists when analyzing theme of this short story. Albetrine, who is the short story’s protagonist, is a Native American woman who characterizes her son Buddy as “the best thing that has ever happened to me”. The antagonist, are westerners who work on behalf of the United States Government. Given this dynamic, the stage is set for a clash between the two forces. The struggle between these two can be viewed as a microcosm for what has occurred throughout history between Native Americans and Caucasians. With all this in mind, the reader can see that the theme of this piece is the battle of Native Americans to maintain their culture and way of life as their homeland is invaded by Caucasians. In addition to the theme, Erdrich’s usage of the third person limited point of view helps the reader understand the short story from several different perspectives while allowing the story to maintain the ambiguity and mysteriousness that was felt by many Natives Americans as they endured similar struggles. These two literary elements help set an underlying atmos...
Human; relating to or having characteristics of a person(Merriam-Webster). A human is truly just a soul combined with characteristics of other people, and this is proven by Jenna Fox; the main character in The Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary Pearson. After finding out what her body is made up of, Jenna along with other characters think she is not human. Despite this Jenna Fox has always had the key elements it takes to be a human been. Jenna for one has a past and memories that make up her life even after the accident. More importantly it is unfair to call her a “monster” when she shows characteristics similar to that of other humans. Needless to say, Jenna just as any other human isn’t perfect, and she later learns that in order to be one hundred percent human she must have the same chances of succeeding in life as any other human would. Jenna Fox is human because she has a soul regardless of her differences.
Mary Emeny’s poem, “Barbed Wire,” depicts war as a negative force, destroying every decent aspect of human existence. Written during the Vietnam War, the work displays Emeny’s negative views on war. In one way or another everyone experiences and identifies with the presence of war. Although some wars are fought for justifiable reasons, every war tears into the lives of those undeserving. The tragic effects of war consume the innocent creating an unconquerable path of entanglement.
Maggie Nelson’s work The Argonauts is a genre-blending memoir, which at its core explores the imitations of love and language by offering brazen and intense firsthand accounts into the complexities and delights of making a gender fluid family. Traditional aspects of unconditional love, specifically in the nuclear family, are rarely present in this work. Does Nelson believe that love and language have their own limitations? Or is she pushing the boundaries by questioning the definition of “unconditional love” and if there is even such a concept in the modern world? This question is initially exemplified in The Argonauts when it states: “the conviction that words are not good enough. Not only not good enough, but corrosive to all that is good,
Whether one would like to admit it or not, change is a difficult and not to mention uncomfortable experience which we all must endure at one point in our lives. A concept that everyone must understand is that change does not occur immediately, for it happens overtime. It is necessary for time to pass in order for a change to occur, be it days, weeks, months, or even years. The main character, who is also the narrator of “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, realizing that “things felt less foreign in the dark” (Russell 225), knows that she will be subject to change very soon. The author makes it evident to readers that the narrator is in a brand new environment as the story begins. This strange short story about girls raised by wolves being trained by nuns to be more human in character is a symbol for immigration, as the girls are forced to make major changes in their lives in order to fit in with their new environment and adapt to a new culture.
John Green’s novel An Abundance of Katherines won a multitude of awards for its funny, relatable, and heartwarming plot that can be enjoyed by any age group.
In Sophie's World, Jostein Gaarder teaches philosophy and it explains basic philosophical ideas better than any other reading book or textbook that I have ever read. The many philosophical lessons of the diversified thinkers of their own time were dexterously understood. The author has a wonderful knack for finding the heart of a concept and placing it on display. For example, he metamorphoses Democritus' atoms into Lego bricks and in a stroke makes the classical conception of the atom dexterously attainable. He relates all the abstract concepts about the world and what is real with straightforward everyday things that everyone can relate to which makes this whole philosophy course manageable. ''The best way of approaching philosophy is to ask a few philosophical questions: How was the world created? Is there any will or meaning behind what happens? Is there a life after death? How can we answer these questions? And most important, how ought we to live?'' (Gaarder, Jostein 15).
Angela Carter’s 1984 short fiction story, The Company of Wolves is set in the region of mountain and forest during the winter. She wrote four stories according to the mountain where all characters are in. Those stories become one big story. She uses that type of imagery to shows various characters and plots. Wolves are always mentioned in all four stories. A hunter kills a wolf for protection of the town. A witch cursed the cheating groom’s girl with miserly howling of wolves. A man angrily turns into wolf when he finds out his fiancé get married to another man and have children. It also retells the story of Little Red Riding Hood. The Company of Wolves is more gothic and darker. I assume Carter wants to warn young girls to beware of attractive
In the second chapter of Animal’s People, its protagonist Animal talks about eyes, eyes that fill the darkness, that appear whichever way he looks, and look for things to see. He says eyes come whenever he starts talking, they quietly watch and patiently wait, and then settle like flies on the pictures that are born from everything he says.