The book, “The Secret Garden” by France Hodgson Burnett is a wonderful fiction classic. The book contains 279 pages of one of Burnett’s work of arts. You will be amazed by the change that happens throughout the book.
The story, “The Secret Garden starts off at the main character, Mary Lennox’s house in India. She lives there with her mother and father. Her father is an army captain who she hardly ever sees and her mother is a beautiful woman who doesn’t want anything to do with her daughter. Mary is taken care of by her Ayah and other servants that are in her home. She is also hidden from many people because they consider her ugly and not worth looking at. One day a disease called cholera gets spread through her home and everyone except herself dies. A group of soldiers went searching through the house to make sure there is no one in it and they found Mary. Mary then was sent to England and lived with a family for a short period of time until she was brought to live with her Uncle Archibald Craven in his house, Misselthwaite Manor in Yorkshire. Her uncle is considered a miserable hunch back that has been unhappy since his wife died. When she gets there she finds out about a secret garden from a servant. The Secret Garden was locked up by her uncle after his wife died because it was her garden. The key was hidden somewhere in the ground outside. She became interested by it and wanted to find it.
Mary becomes happier too and didn’t seem as ugly to people. She becomes nicer and a lot of it had to do with an old man who is a gardener and his name is Ben Weatherstaff. He becomes one of her first friends she had ever had. One day she heard cries coming from one of the many rooms in the house. One of the servants who watched over Mary ...
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...hen she goes to live with her uncle she meets people and makes friends. She becomes a prettier more elegant girl and cares about other people and things. She does more instead of sitting in a room. “Now she was on the other side of the orchard and standing in the path outside a wall-“ ****
My opinion on the book is that it is a wonderful book for all ages. I love how the author shows in great detail how Mary Lennox changes in every aspect from the beginning of the book to the end. I like how her curiosity brings everyone in the story together eventually and how she works to makes things happen. The way the book is written helps to understand how the characters feel and what they are going through at the time. “The Secret Garden” is a wonderful classic I would suggest to people of all ages to enjoy and get to know the characters through the author’s outstanding work.
Over this entire novel, it is a good novel for children. It train children how to think logically, and notes people we should cherish our family, and people around us, very educate. Children can learn true is always been hide.
She tried to do many things to be “better” than she had been. Showering everyday to be the cleanest version herself made her feel that it enhanced her quality of life. She was doing this day in day out and even sometimes twice a day as part of her “cleanliness”. While she did not have much money, she spent her extra cash on what she felt was its place to be spent in. Herself. Her appearance. Edith had bought the nicest and most soothing scent of perfume along with a flashy wristwatch and admirable dresses in an attempt to boost her self-esteem and self-image. Amidst the scent of roses and nice clothes Edith tried to change her attitude. She refused to gossip anytime Mrs.Henderson would endeavour at gossip. Edith read beauty magazines and books about proper etiquette one of many customs she had adopted. She did this daily and accustomed to it believing that she needed to it to be the more proper version of herself as the way she wanted to execute her plan of a changed woman. Edith altered herself and the way she did many things. Although she still knew who she really was and where she came from, she refused to accept it. Along with many things were done Edith’s decisions were overthrown by her self-image on her role of a daughter
Lily’s idea of home is having loving parent/mother figures who can help guide her in life. Because of this desire, she leaves T. Ray and begins to search for her true identity. This quest for acceptance leads her to meet the Calendar Sisters. This “home” that she finds brightly displays the ideas of identity and feminine society. Though Lily could not find these attributes with T. Ray at the peach house, she eventually learns the truth behind her identity at the pink house, where she discovers the locus of identity that resides within herself and among the feminine community there. Just like in any coming-of-age story, Lily uncovers the true meaning of womanhood and her true self, allowing her to blossom among the feminine influence that surrounds her at the pink house. Lily finds acceptance among the Daughters of Mary, highlighting the larger meaning of acceptance and identity in the novel.
Bold, authentic, and compelling are a few words to describe Sue Monk Kidd’s piece, The Secret Life of Bee’s. This novel transports the reader to the summer of 1964 in the South, with the perspective of the changing 14-year-old Lily Owens. This young lady lives with her egocentric detestable father, her loving colored caretaker, and the taunting memory of her mother's death. Lily is a shy, friendless, and fearful girl who loves reading and writing. Nevertheless, she longs to be popular and loved. But it all starts to change when she got the courage to run away from her father, and breakout her stubbornly brave caretaker, Rosaleen, who had been incarcerated. Lily and Rosaleen find themselves in Tiburon, South Carolina living in a pink honey farm that belongs to three colored Boatwright sisters; August, June, and May. They take part of a group called the Daughters of Mary. After spending some time with them and several tragic incidents, Lily comes clean about her identity and asks about her mother, Deborah, who had been a part of their group. The truth about her mother hurt but with the help from the Boatwright sisters and the Daughters of Mary, Lily's feelings of loneliness and
Classics explore aspects of human identity and reveal how people struggle with mistakes and pain, how people realize their own childishness, and how to learn from mistakes. The Secret Life of Bees, set in the American South in 1964 amid racial unrest, tells story of Lily Owens, a white 14-year-old girl who is searching for the truth about her deceased mother. She lives on a peach farm with her cruel and abusive father, T. Ray, who tells Lily that she accidentally shot her mother, Deborah, when she was four. Lily accompanies the family’s black housekeeper, Rosaleen, to town to register to vote. Taunted by white men, she spills the contents of her snuff jar on their feet, is beaten, taken to jail,
In the novel Jane Eyre, it narrates the story of a young, orphaned girl. The story begins shortly after Jane walk around Gateshead Hall and evolves within the different situations she face growing up. During Jane’s life the people she encounter has impact her growth and the character she has become.
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd is a realistic fiction novel that tells the story of Lily Owens, a 14 year old girl living in South Carolina, in 1964 with her father; T. Raye, and her housekeeper, Rosaleen. Lily and Rosalyn get into an argument with a couple white men. Rosaleen pours her chew on one of the white men because of their obscure comments. Times being how they were in 1964 Rosaleen was put in jail for spitting on a white man. Lily decides she needs to break Rosaleen out. I will present to you the main character’s personality, the main idea of this novel, and how I personally related to the main character.
On the other hand, the garden itself within The Secret Garden can be classified as a cultivated natural therapeutic landscape. What makes the garden truly remarkable as a therapeutic is its role in Mary’s coming of age, considering that prior to Mary’s exposure to the garden she was raised without an appropriate adult role models but nonetheless reached emotional maturity. In addition, the garden is considered a true therapeutic landscape due to its role in healing not only Mary, but also Colin and Archibald
Unrealistically, the narrator believes that she would be of use to her father more and more as she got older. However, as she grows older, the difference between boys and girls becomes more clear and conflicting to her.
Jane spends her first 10 years of her life at Gateshead Hall, a lavish mansion. She lived with her Aunt, Mrs Reed, and three cousins, Eliza, Georgina and John. During her time in the mansion she wouldn't dare argue with the mistress, and fulfilled every duty. Jane is deprived of love, joy and acceptance. She is very much unwanted and isolated.
Walker, Alice. (1974). “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens.” Ways of Reading. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, pp. 694-701.
In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, companionship plays an important role. It seems like a lot of the characters in the novel need someone that they could talk to, someone that they could listen to or someone that needs to listen to them. Also someone that they could count on in times of needs.
away, and we knew that with nothing left, she would have to cling to that which had
Although imagery and symbolism does little to help prepare an expected ending in “The Flowers” by Alice Walker, setting is the singular element that clearly reasons out an ending that correlates with the predominant theme of how innocence disappears as a result of facing a grim realism from the cruel world. Despite the joyous atmosphere of an apparently beautiful world of abundant corn and cotton, death and hatred lies on in the woods just beyond the sharecropper cabin. Myop’s flowers are laid down as she blooms into maturity in the face of her fallen kinsman, and the life of summer dies along with her innocence. Grim realism has never been so cruel to the innocent children.
“In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens” touches mainly upon family heritage and the way her heritage was created. In Atwan’s Ten on Ten, you will find the essay on the Mothers’ Gardens. On page 83 it states, “For they were going nowhere immediate, and the future was not yet within their grasp.” This quote signifies how mothers and grandmothers would always be set serving the men in their lives; for their entire lives, however, there was a different future, a plan that they didn’t see yet. This plan was for them to identify their artistic ability, whether if it was through singing, writing or making quilts.