Jonas is a teen from The Giver by Lois Lowry, who escaped from his community because it was too controlled. He had a tiny companion with him, Gabriel, a baby who was going to be released, or killed because he was causing problems at night. After biking for days, Jonas and Gabriel are on a snowy hill, starving and freezing. They will probably freeze/starve to death in the snow because Jonas and Gabriel are really weak, and Jonas thinks he is Elsewhere, which is where the released “go.” Jonas and Gabriel are really weak and close to starving to death. On page 224, it says, “Jonas felt himself losing consciousness and with his whole being willed himself to stay upright atop the sled, clutching Gabriel, keeping him safe.” On page 218, it says,
What are memories to you? In the book The Giver, by Lois Lowry. There is a boy his name is Jonas. He is the Receiver of Memories. Jonas experiences the memories over the course of the book. Memories help us understand there are consequences to your actions. Although some readers may believe that memories are not important. The memories Jonas had helped him with the journey at the end of the book.
Jonas wakes up in a home made out of logs. The man, who saved Jonas and Gabe, was making a fire. "Who are you?" Jonas asked the man. "I'm John and you and the little one with you are lucky to be alive." Jonas paused for a moment "Thank you for saving us." "What were you thinking when you went out in that blizzard?" John asked. "Its a long story." Jonas said in a scared tone.
Jonas said “I gave him memories along the way to let him survive, but he’s cold.” The giver had started to give Jonas and Gabe memories to keep them warm and alive. Jonas felt the memory of him sitting next to a campfire and it was as hot as a hot bathing room in the house of the old. Jonas had remembered about his friends Fiona and Asher and asked the giver. “Where is Fiona and Asher.”
In the end, Jonas, with the help of The Giver, escapes from the community with an infant new-child at risk of being killed (released) and seeks out a life full of feeling and love. While he does get away, we don't know exactly w...
Sameness is the quality or state of being alike or of not changing. Everyone is same in Jonas’s community. Sameness has both advantages and disadvantages, but more advantages in The Giver by Lois Lowry.
Jonas decides to leave and change the lives of his people so that they can experience the truth. “The Giver rubbed Jonas’s hunched shoulders… We’ll make a plan” (155). Their plan involves leaving sameness and heading to Elsewhere, where Jonas knows the memories can be released to the people. He has a connection with Gabe, a special child who has experienced the memories, unlike the rest of the community. Jonas has a strong love for Gabe, and he longs to give him a better life. “We’re almost there, Gabriel” (178). Even with a sprained ankle, Jonas keeps pushing forward because he wants everyone to experience what The Giver has given him. He wants them to have a life where the truth is exposed. His determination allows him to make a change for a greater future in his community. This proves that Jonas has the strength to change his community for the
Evelyn Sanchez (esanchez47@student.cccd.edu) Professor Leighton English 143, Final Essay 21 May 21, 2014 What the heck happened to Jonas? Topic #2. The Giver is actually one of my all-time favorite books, so I’ve looked into why she left the book so inconclusive in the past. The Giver is basically about a boy named Jonas who lives in a perfect society. He lives in a household with his two parents and his little sister Lilly.
Personally, I believe that Jonas and Gabriel ended up dying in the freezing cold, while starving and going insane; I also have various reasons to back this theory up. Firstly, on pages 171-172, it states that Jonas and Gabriel begin to starve; this could mean that they would also end up losing their sanity and even possibly see illusions. Furthermore, all throughout chapter 23, it explains that Jonas and Gabriel are agonizingly cold while surrounded by a snowy environment. This may lead to Jonas and Gabriel to lose their sanity and see illusions as well. At the very end of the story, Jonas is able to see “Elsewhere,” the place they left the community to search for. However, it is possible that Jonas is seeing nothing but an illusion. Along with all of this, Jonas is used to livin...
“Sometimes the hardest thing and the right thing are the same” -the fray. In the novel “The Giver” by Lois Lowry, there is a part in the book where Jonas, the protagonist, has to decide whether to bring Gabriel, a small child raised in the same family unit as Jonas, on his long journey towards “elsewhere”. Jonas has to make the decision to bring Gabriel along on his dangerous journey or to leave Gabriel at the community where Jonas knows that they will kill him. Jonas made the right choice to bring Gabriel. Jonas knew if he left Gabe there at the community they would kill him. Gabe would be given a better chance to live rather than to be left dead at the community. Gabe’s presence could provide Jonas the motivation to keep going towards “elsewhere”.
Dystopian literature brings warning to the modern world and allows the audience to experience a new perception of life. The 1993 novel, The Giver, by Lois Lowry, fits into the dystopian genre because it makes judgment about modern society. She inscribed her novel “For all the children to whom we entrust the future”, which serves as a hope for a better future (Franklin). She targets the younger generation because they are the future. In Lowry’s novel, The Giver, Lowry’s perspective on modern society is that it tends to stay within its comfort zone, which creates limitations in life. The dystopian characteristics of the novel, importance of memory, the history surrounding the novel, and Lowry’s personal background all convey the notion that modern society should freedom bestowed it and to fully appreciate life in itself; society tends to take life’s freedoms for granted.
“The Giver” a novel by Lois Lowry (1993), is an, engaging science fiction tale that provides the reader with examples of thought provoking ethical and moral quandaries. It is a novel geared to the young teenage reader but also kept me riveted. Assigning this novel as a class assignment would provide many opportunities for teachers and students to discuss values and morals.
In the novel, The Giver by Lois Lowry, the author makes it clear through the main character Jonas that freedom and safety need to find an equal balance. Lowry shows the importance of deep emotions and family through Jonas. Jonas becomes the new receiver of memory and learns about the past. He also learned about the way it was when people knew what love was. Jonas’ father releases newborn children because they don’t weight the correct amount of weight or they don’t sleep well through the night. Release is a nice way of saying kill; the people of the community don’t know what kill means. They don’t have the freedom to expand their vocabulary. Lois Lowry makes it clear that safety has a negative side and you need that you need freedom to have a high functioning community.
@Jonah Johnson “The amount of restrictions this community puts on people is unreasonable, and I'm surprised anyone takes their pills and abides to be bleak being of Blood, skin, and flesh, and doesn't riot” (Johnson 2). In your post I don’t fully agree with what you said. With the new chapter that we read we can give an educated guess on why people act the way they do. “I do not understand it. You members of the community will not understand it, either. Perhaps Jonas will, because the current Receiver has told us that Jonas already has this quality. He calls it the Capacity to See Beyond" (Lowry 64). The “Capacity to See Beyond” and Jonas’ job of Receiver of Memory’s makes me wonder if the Receiver of Memory’s keeps all the things like animals
Would you preferably eat pig liver or a the world’s spiciest pepper, which is a Carolina Reaper? Read the entire series of The Hobbit or the entire series of Harry Potter? Be clever in an idiotic community or be unintelligent in an intelligent community? Do you have any options in life, no matter what it is? Is it fine to have the freedom to make decisions of any kind? Do you think it is exceptional to have the freedom to make choices, even if that means we have the freedom to make terrible choices? In The Giver, by Lois Lowry, writes about a 12 year old kid named Jonas who lives with his parents and little sister, Lily. Jonas is chosen to be the Receiver of Memory and to keep the people in his community from experiencing true excruciating pain such as war. I think that it’s healthy to have the freedom to make decisions, even if that means we have the freedom to make terrible choices?