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Help With Book Reports Papers
The Pearl: Material Society, Material Thoughts
... The doctor who had resided in the upper-class
section of the town, refused to assistant the child, turning them away when
they arrived at the door. Lastly they turned to the sea to seek their
fortune. When Juana set sight on the "Pearl of The World." she felt as
though all her prayers had been answered, if she could have foreseen the
future what she would have seen would have been a mirror image of her
reality. Juana's husband was caught in a twisted realm of mirrors, and
they were all shattering one by one. In the night he heard a "sound so
soft that it might have been simply a thought..." and quickly attack ...
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The Theme Of Catch 22
... and monetary fixation. He is a stock character of greed and capitalism. Even when he and Yossarian were looking for the kid sister he is preoccupied with making profit. As soon as Milo hears about the opportunity to smuggle tobacco he loses all interest in helping Yossarian. “Milo was deaf and kept pushing forward, nonviolently but irresistibly, sweating, his eyes, as though he were in the grip of a blind fixation, burning feverishly, and his twitching mouth slavering. He moaned calmly as though in remote instinctive distress and kept repeating ‘Illegal Tobacco, Illegal Tobacco” (Heller 421). This obsessio ...
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Walden
... too highly of humans on a whole.
The first allusions of human battles and people is to the Trojan War. Thoreau makes many references to this great struggle which has popped up many a philosophical debates. “The legions of these Myrmidons covered all the hills and vales in my wood yard, and the ground was already strewn with the dead and dying, both red and black.” This is the first reference to the Trojans and their war. The Myrmidons were the people of ancient Thessaly who followed their king, Achilles, to the Trojan War. “Or perchance he was some Achilles, who had nourished his wrath apart, and ...
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SOLO Report
... is clever but physcotic, because his hobby, as
gruesome as it may seem, is killing. It began one day when his nanny was
killed. It seemed she was killed by a hit and run driver. John, who loved
his nanny so much, decided to get revenge, and revenge he did. He killed
the man who had been driving the car.
The book starts out, as said, with a killing and then by revealing the
killer. Then the book goes into a story of the life of the man Mikali. His
mother and father had been killed at sea, and the only people he had left
were his nanny and his aunt. The book gives an accurate description of his
life and times ...
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The Awakening: Edna Pontellier's Spiritual Awakening
... to do anything for her children, except give her self up for them. Her individuality was preserved during her life by her separations from her family. Edna bought the house around the corner in order to go and be away from her children and paint. Towards the end of her life, Edna realizes that she is becoming consumed by her family. They are taking over her soul. “But she knew a way to elude them.” (p. 115) Her actions around her suicide greatly symbolize everything she hope to achieve in her life, and finally found in her death. As she walked down to the beach for the last time she put on her bathing suit ...
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Common Human Experiences In To Kill A Mockingbird
... a doubt
that Tom is innocent. But in a all white jury guilt or innocence is not
important to them the only thing that is important to them is that Tom Robinson
is black. Even if the jurors wanted to say that they beleived Tom was innocent
they would have to face the people of Maycomb and then they would be shunned
for letting a black man go free.
Boo Radley was also the victim of prejudice. The people of Maycomb county
did not understand Boo, he was not seen outside of his house and people did not
know what to think. They made up their own ideas of what he was like and made
him out to be some sort of monste ...
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Materialism - The Great Gatsby
... as the setting of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, which is an example of this set in the 20’s. The characters in this novel are too fixed on material things, losing sight of what is really important.
The characters in The Great Gatsby take a materialistic attitude that causes them to fall into a downward spiral of empty hope and zealous obsession. Fitzgerald contrasts Jay Gatsby and Nick Carraway to display how the materialistic attitude of the 1920’s leads many to hopeless depression and how materialism never constitutes happiness. Fitzgerald uses Jay Gatsby, a character who spends his entir ...
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Sex In Ragtime
... between the
classes. The sexual activity that is most relevant to the story line occurs in
the relationship between Father and Mother. While these scenes definitely imply
sexual activity, they are definitely not as intense as the erotic scenes between
other characters. After their relationship has been analyzed, one can see that
the relationship between Mother and Father is one that seems to be held together
purely by sexual desire. The first reference to this is at the very beginning
of the novel. Doctorow writes, "On Sunday afternoon, after dinner, Father and
Mother went upstairs and closed the bedroom door"(p ...
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Edgar Allan Poe And The Raven
... Raven”,
information on the author’s life and lifestyle, a brief look at other Poe
works, criticism on his writings, and some unusual ways his fame has been
honored . To begin with, “The Raven” holds a dark sense of elegance which
has been appealing to many since it was written in 1845.
The theme of “The Raven” is simple: a man suffering the loss of his
love is visited by a speaking raven, whose repetitious, meaningless answers
torture him to the point of insanity (see Appendix R) (Decoder, Internet).
The feeling of lost love portrayed in the poem might have refl ...
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Okonkwo: Overwhelmed By His Past
... Even as a little boy he had resented his father’s failure and weakness . . . . And so Okonkwo was ruled by one passion-to hate everything that his father Unoka had loved. One of those things was gentleness and another was idleness. (13)
This displays his desires to live his life differing with that of his father. In his first step to overcome his past, he believes that he is one step closer to overcoming his fear of becoming like Unoka. This eventually develops to be his ultimate goal in life. As time progresses, he becomes obsessed with the concept of being different from his father, beginning his life ha ...
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