Cadence Sinclair Eastman, also known as Cady, is the main character in We Were Liars by E. Lockhart. The book centers around Cady and, after a mysterious event one summer, her struggles to remember what happened during summer fifteen on the her family’s private island. At the beginning of the book, the reader is unsure of what is wrong with Cady, just that she takes a lot of medicine for headaches. As the books unfolds, the reader realizes that the headaches and memory loss was trigger but a horrific event that involved a fire that killed her cousins. However, the fact that her cousins are dead are not realized till the end of the book, but at the beginning Cady hallucinates them. The song, “Medicine” by Daughter can be used to describe the
The Song at the Scaffold, by Getrud von Le Fort, takes place in France during the French Revolution. It is the story of Blanche de la Force and her journey to understanding the meaning behind her unusual fear and discovering her vocation in life, and ultimately a story of bravery and heroism. After a traumatic birth, young Blanche is forever scarred, and her external expression of this ordeal is an irrational fear at nearly anything. She grows up timid and afraid, unable to muster any sort of courage, although she often attempts to overcome her fear. Later, she joins a Carmelite Convent, and it is here her journey truly begins. It is also at the Convent that she meets Sister Marie of the Incarnation, the novice mistress. Although Sister Marie is protective of Blanche, even she eventually becomes impatient and annoyed at Blanche’s feebleness and often perplexing fear. Sister
Initially, the narrator introduced Tilly Evans as if she was the protagonist of the play, following he announced Tilly’s older sister Agnes, clarifying to the audience that the story is indeed about Agnes and not Tilly. Agnes, an average girl, wants to leave behind her hometown after the tragic death of her parents and her younger sister Tilly. Preparing to move in with her boyfriend Miles, Agnes begins packing up her sister’s room and discovers Tally’s Dungeons & Dragons journal. Consequently, after reading the
Holly Janquell is a runaway. Wendelin Van Draanan creates a twelve year old character in the story, Runaway, that is stubborn and naive enough to think she can live out in the streets alone, until she is eighteen.She has been in five foster homes for the past two years. She is in foster care because her mother dies of heroin overdose. In her current foster home, she is abused, locked in the laundry room for days without food, and gets in even more trouble if she tries to fight back. Ms.Leone, her schoolteacher, could never understand her, and in Holly’s opinion, probably does not care. No one knows what she is going through, because she never opens up to any one. Ms. Leone gives Holly a journal at school one day and tells her to write poetry and express her feelings. Holly is disgusted. But one day when she is sitting in the cold laundry room, and extremely bored, she pulls out the diary, and starts to write. When Holly can take no more of her current foster home, she runs, taking the journal with her. The journal entries in her journal, are all written as if she is talking to Ms.Leone, even though she will probably never see her again. Over the course of her journey, Holly learns to face her past through writing, and discovers a love for poetry. At some point in this book, Holly stops venting to Ms. Leone and starts talking to her, almost like an imaginary friend, and finally opens up to her.
Codi meets friends from her past in Grace. She tries to find a niche in the world she is living in. Her sister Hallie, is a heroic figure to her. Hallie has found her c...
For this paper I read the novel The Memory Keeper’s Daughter by Kim Edwards, this novel is told in the span of 25 years, it is told by two characters David and Caroline, who have different lives but are connect through one past decision. The story starts in 1964, when a blizzard happens causing the main character, Dr. David Henry to deliver his own twins. During the delivery the son named Paul is fine but the daughter named Phoebe has something wrong with her. The doctor realizes that the daughter has Down syndrome, he is shocked and age remembers his own childhood when his sister was always sick, her dyeing at an early and how that effected his mother. He didn’t want that to happen to his wife, so David told the nurse to bring Phoebe to an institution, so that his wife wouldn’t suffer. The nurse, Caroline didn’t think this was right, but brings Phoebe to the institution anyways. Once Caroline sees the institution in an awful state she leaves with the baby and
Mrs Kay is the teacher of the progress class and is the leader of the
The novel “The Secret Place” by Tana French tells the story of four friends and their journey through a mysterious death at their boarding school. They all share a close bond that is until someone disrupts their peaceful family. Holly, Salena, Rebecca and Julia are sister like friends who do everything together until Salena becomes close with a boy named Chris from a nearby boy’s school. All the girls soon become distant from one another once they find out that their vow has broken but Rebecca takes a different route about this and ends up killing Chris to protect their “Family”. These girls keep creating problems for themselves wanting to go back to the happier times but instead just keep digging holes for themselves. Each girl struggles between doing the right or wrong thing to protect one another. But one of the girls took it to another level, Rebecca seems to have an obsessive relationship with the girls that is not healthy. She is a character that leaves people asking many questions about her and why she has these problems and how this could have
In McEwan’s Atonement ventures into the lives of the Tallis sisters and the complexities that naivety and selfishness can inflict. Briony Tallis’ perjury against Robbie Turner, in her cousin Lola’s criminal rape case, disrupts the Tallis family dynamic and the budding romance between Cecelia Tallis and Robbie. Briony’s maturation and realization of her wrongdoing implores her to become a nurse during WWII. In Atonement, McEwan depicts a family in turmoil over the lies of young Briony during World War II. The imagery and symbolism portray Briony’s characterization through her attempts to serve penance for her betrayal with symbolism and imagery. Briony’s limited point of view effects the tone of the novel through an unreliable eyewitness account of what she witnessed and the recognition of her mistakes.
“‘KISS ME, HARDY! Kiss me, QUICK!’ Turned her face away from me to make it easier. And I shot her” (Wein 285), desperately yelled Jullie in Elizabeth Wein’s book, Code Name Verity. Throughout this tale of two female companions in World War II, the theme of friendship was portrayed through the bond between Maddie and Julie, the alliances with those around them, and the events that tie these two together.
Quentin’s depiction of Caddy’s loss of innocence is one in which he blames himself. The suicidal Harvard student blames himself for Caddy’s pregnancy and hurried marriage. Quentin repeats...
The main characters in Jane Yolen’s story “Suzy and Leah” are, Suzy Ann McCarthy, and Leah Shoshana Hershkowitz. Although their relationship had a very rocky start because neither one of them knew each other, Suzy’s feelings begin to revolutionize about Leah throughout the diary because they got to know and care for one another. In the beginning they did not know each other. Suzy’s feelings begin to change about Leah when her mother told her about the excruciating times and places that Leah was in. The two characters, Suzy and Leah read each others diary to get a better knowing of each other.
Everyone disdained Melinda because of what happened in summer, yet no one knew reality. In the midst of the pre-summer everything transformed into a terrible dream for Melinda. She was too much startled, making it difficult to shield herself. Melinda expected to ignore the memory of that unpleasant night. She was in like manner panicked to defend herself that night. Something facilitated happened in the midst of that mid year get-together
Melinda Sordino started off her high school experience like an outcast. She didn’t have any friends and she just expected it to stay that way. All Melinda wanted was to tell her best friend what really happened, but the closest she got to a friend was Heather from Ohio. She became depressed not only from what happened but also from being stuck in the tiny town of Syracuse, New York. She is going through her freshman year acting like nothing ever happened. She spends almost the entire year mute because she thinks no one will want to hear what she has to say. Melinda struggles with trying to find her voice the entire book. It’s not until the end that she realizes how much she’s dying to say, and what she has been missing all this time. She somehow
You and Samuel been telling so many lies, who can believe anything you say.” (185) (IC; CA DC IC) Corrine’s logos is clearly defined by her action of “turning her face to the wall” because Corrine has come to accept her thoughts of Samuel and Nettie as fact and everything else as a lie that she is obligated to “turn” from; moreover, when she turns her face “to the wall,” Corrine affirms her jealousy by turning from her intimate attachments to something that can feel no such thing, the wall. Corrine has deindividuated herself as a coping mechanism for the logos of jealousy she has acquired, similar to Celie becoming a “tree” when beaten, a defense mechanism to avoid emotions from taking
The novel follows the protagonist, Celie, as she experiences such hardships as racism and abuse, all the while attempting to discover her own sense of self-worth. Celie expresses herself through a series of private letters that are initially addressed to God, then later to her sister Nettie. As Celie develops from an adolescent into an adult, her letters possess m... ... middle of paper ... ... bservations of her situation and form an analysis of her own feelings.