Louis L’Amour was born Louis Dearborn LaMoore on March 22, 1908 as the last of seven children. His father and mother are Dr. Louis Charles LaMoore and Emily Dearborn LaMoore, for the first fifteen years of his life Louis lived in Jamestown, North Dakota; a medium sized farming community in the valley where Pipestem Creek flows into the James River. His grandfather, Abraham Truman Dearborn, told Louis stories of battles in history and his own personal experiences as a soldier. As a child Louis spent a great deal of time in a nearby library where his eldest sister, Edna, was a librarian, he was interested in the study of History and always went beyond the scope that was taught in the schools. In addition to the study of History and Natural Sciences, Louis was interested in the fiction writings of Robert Louis Stevenson, Jack London, Edgar Rice Burroughs and others. The members of the L’Amour family were intelligent and had a part in Louis’ education. Emmy Lou, his sister, taught him how to read, his father taught him about animals, taught him the benefit hard work and the fact that “a man could always find a way to solve a problem”. The basics of learning he got from his mother who had once trained to be a schoolteacher, and from Edna he got insights into libraries and research. His elder brother Parker provided examples of a reporter’s speed and simplicity of prose and the public relations savvy of a veteran political aid. Yale, his second brother, showed Louis a love of life and a gift of improvisation. Louis’ adopted brother John was an example of a natural survivor, quick of wit and sharp of tongue. Hard times uprooted the family from their everyday lives and the family, the father, mother, Louis and john, had to take their fort...
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...tory line was very good. It had good imagery right from the start; in all the scenes in the book one can visualize the surroundings and feel what the characters feel. When Talon found the dying man “a head lifted from the water. A strained white face…gasping, pleading, reaching out (5)” the desperation of the man is felt in the diction used. When Talon and Macklem fight the tension in the room is palpable, it says, “there was the pound of rushing feet on the deck outside. A cannon roared again (150)” it sounds almost like the fast beating of a heart and the beating becoming louder. The fact that this scene is crucial is evident in the method it is written.
Works Cited
“Adventure in the Great American Tradition.” The Official Louis L’Amour Website. Louis L’Amour Enterprises, Inc. Web. 3 Marc 2014.
L’Amour, Louis. Rivers West. New York: Bantam Books, 1974. Print
a. Miles Roby: Dynamic, main character in the story and operator of the Empire Grill. While Miles spends the duration of the book trying to flee Empire Falls- his dream is nearly achieved as a teenager when he attends a small Catholic college in New York. But his dreams are cut short when his mother becomes ill and he needs to return to the town to work to provide for his mother's medical expenses. Everything seems to be holding Miles in Empire Falls until Mrs. Whiting (a very influential and controlling figure in Mile’s life) dies in a struggle for control.
Have you ever had to do something really hard that you didn’t want to do? Did you run away because of it? Didi everything turn out the right way? Holes is a book by Louis Sachar about a boy called Stanley Yelnats. I think that the theme for holes is perseverance because he escapes Camp Green Lake, survives in the desert, and overcomes poverty and becomes rich.
Everyday people across the world embark on incredible journeys. These journeys, however big or small, can greatly change a person. They can define who that person is and how that person acts. In Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier, many characters go through changes or have their true character tested. Ada realizes that all of her learning through books will not really help her in the real world circumstances that she becomes surrounded in. She has to change adapt to her new life with the help of Ruby. Inman constantly battles good against evil. He struggles through physical and mental weakness to ultimately try to do good. His life is traumatized by the horrors of the war, yet he must continue his strenuous journey. Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier explores the concept of a dynamic character in Ada and a consciences character in Inman and how they deal with their separate, difficult journeys. Both characters also try to find their own sense of home and struggle with their own kind of isolation.
In the story "So Much Water So Close To Home" a young girl is raped, killed and found in a river where four men are fishing. What makes this story interesting is that after discovering the body they did not report it until after they left, three days later. When one of the men who discovered her, the husband of the narrator, Stuart returns home he doesn't tell his wife about the incident until the following morning. Because of this, Claire believes that all men are responsible for the murder of the girl. Due to these facts she acts irrationally, suspiciously, and with distrust not only towards her husband, but also to all men in general.
Known for his works, full of masculinity and adventure, Ernest Hemingway became one of the greatest writers of the twenty-first century, he wrote novels and short stories about outdoorsmen, soldiers and other men of action, all of these, characteristics of his own persona. Hemingway was born on July 21, 1899, in Oak Park, Illinois, to Clarence Edmunds and Grace Hemingway, both strict Congregationalists. Hemingway's early years were spent largely in combating the repressive feminine influence of his mother and nurturing the masculine influence of his father. He spent the summers with his family in the woods of northern Michigan, where he often accompanied his father on professional calls. He started writing as a teenager by writing a weekly column for his high school newspaper. He also began to write poems and stories during this time, some of which were published in his school's literary magazine. After graduating high school in 1917 Hemingway started his career as a reporter for the Kansas City Star covering city crime and writing feature stories. The position helped him develop a journalistic style which would later become one of the most identifiable characteristics of his fiction. In 1918, Hemingway signed up to be an ambulance driver on the Italian front in World War I. He arrived in May and by July he was badly injured by mortar fire. While being injured, he carried an Italian soldier to safety and by doing so Ernest received the Italian Silver Medal of Bravery. After coming home in 1919, he spent time on camping and fishing trips and one week in the back-country of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. This trip became an inspiration for his short story “Big Two-Hearted River.” Later that year he became a freelancer and staff writer ...
3.) Sara Margaret- She is Linda’s four-year-old daughter who lives with Linda’s mother. She gets to be very fond of Jack, but is too young to understand what is going on around her.
It is evident that not all young people are resilient when it comes to dealing with life's challenges, as it was displayed in the book The Wave' written by Morton Rhue. There were a majority of students who were not resilient with the wave and the challenges that emerged from it, such as Amy, Robert and David. The student that was surprisingly resilient was Laurie, who was also the main character of the story. Laurie was mentally and also physically strong at dealing with the consequences that upshot from the wave Such as the isolation from the entire school and her best friend, the break-up with her boyfriend and the discrimination and violence of being and as being an outsider'.
Some people say that history finds a way of repeating itself. The same thing happened to poetry in the Twentieth Century era. Poetry returned to a metaphysical style, which concentrates on nature and the belief in the supernatural power of different things. You ask how is history repeating itself this way? It is like this because this is the style that Romantic Poets wrote. The main difference between the two completely separate eras is the poets in the Twentieth Century use more common events and common relationships. This made poetry even easier to understand because more people could relate to it. To me, their poetry is often easier to understand because it addresses everyday life. I also think that much of this is due to the fact that more people were reading then there ever was before. Now the poets were writing so that everyone could read and understand what they were trying to express and have them relate it to everyday life. This can be easily seen through different works by different authors of that period. Poems such as "Under the Waterfall" By Thomas Hardy and "Sweeney Among the Nightingales" by T. S. Eliot. Both works express their feelings about an ordinary event, adult relationships.
The novel Nadja was written by Surrealist, Andre Breton. The original text of Nadja was written in French and published in 1928. Breton’s writing in Nadja serves to illustrate the primary concepts of surrealism: investigation of the unconscious self, automatism, and chance combined with the use of disjunctive metaphors and unrelated comparisons. (Licka) The story covers a ten day period in which the main character Andre meets a women named Nadja.
Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak is a beloved children's books that is known around the world, and was even made into a film. Even though most people know of the book, it is challenged in many places. If one were to research the author, time period, read why it was banned, or just read the book and its themes they would see the book is harmless and shouldn’t be banned.
I am currently reading the book Holes, by Louis Sachar. I am enjoying the book because it is continuously making me want to keep reading it because there is so much going on in the book that it is hard to put the book down. When I get done reading this book, I might watch the movie to see the differences between the book, and the movie and see what I like better, the book, or the movie. On chapter 18 it says “Zero was a nobody”(Sachar 81) I wonder why nobody cares about Zero, I wonder why he is the only one that gets treated and called a nobody, maybe Zero did something to the rest before stanley came to the camp. I was surprised when the warden asked Stanley if he knew the secret ingredient to her nail polish and when Stanley said “no”
It is hard for the reader not to jump to a quick conclusion about the subject of the novel, given the highly public sibling rivalry exhibited by the older generation of the Theroux family. Marcel is Paul Theroux's son; a section of his father's uproariously entertaining book about V. S. Naipaul, ''Sir Vidia's Shadow,'' elaborated with what seemed like relish on the theme that one brother is always the other's literary inferior. Many readers felt that these passages drew on feelings about Alexander Theroux, Paul's writer brother. And then there is the fact that Marcel's own brother, Louis, has achieved fame in Britain (where both of them were brought up) as a host of TV documentaries. As Sherlock Holmes might have said, these are murky waters, Watson.
Have you ever thought that your family has been cursed? Or have you thought that it’s never your fault when something bad happens to you? In the book Holes by Louis Sachar Stanley gets sent to camp green lake because of his great great Grandpas curse.
‘Waste Land’ uses art to help people see reality and be empowered to make a change. Artist Vik Muniz uses recycled materials to create striking portraits of the workers who sort trash by hand at the Rio Grande Jenerio’s Jardim Gramacho. The landfill was the largest in the world, it closed after the documentary was filmed. From the sprawling hills and mountains of garbage, the workers collect plastics and other materials to sell to recyclers. It’s a stinky, fifthly and dangerous job. However, many of the pickers say that they are proud of their work. They keep recyclable material out of the waterways. Many of the laborers are Brazilians who have fallen on hard times, being a picker is often their only alternative to prostitution or trafficking
History is the study of past events. In his novel Waterland, Graham Swift entwines the past with the present to create a cyclical rhythm, which flows through the narrative. The narrative explores the notion of temporality and explains that instead of time following a linear pattern, it is, in fact, a circle, which moves in into itself, representing the past, the present, and the future. Chapters often end in the middle of a sentence, then picked up at the beginning of the following chapter, suggesting not only the continuity of the story, but the course of history. This style reinforces the content of Waterland and embodies the theme of history being continuous. Waterland features a history teacher and narrator, Tom Crick, who has been urged to take an early retirement on account of his wife stealing a baby from Safeway, after god told her to (15). To try to understand the present, Tom takes a look into his past and decides to use his experiences as a history lesson, and instead of using the syllabus completely, he begins telling his class—his-story. He does not believe in progression, man takes “one step forward, one step back” throughout history. Through Tom’s personal stories and the juxtaposition of the historical facts, the reader infers that the narrative of Waterland believes that history travels in circles.