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Help With Book Reports Papers
Hemmingway's The Sun Also Rises
... in a boxing match and concluded
the sentence with "...and it certainly improved his nose" (11). This can
be taken as a reference to the stereotypical “Jew” nose that is often
associated with Jewish people. Jake and Chon are close friends, and Jake
likes him up to the point where he becomes involved with Brett. Jake goes
on and on about all of the relationship mistakes in Chon¹s life. There
is an hint of jealousy that appears in Jake's tone. He states that women
began to become attracted to Chon as he got older, and that it ³changed
him so that he was not so pleasant to have around² (16). There is
racism ...
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Deliverance
... character, represents all in the way he looks up to
Lewis and strives to be like him. Most men fall into the same category as Drew
because their ability to survive has been clouded by rational thoughts. Then
there is Bobby. Most men do not want to be linked with Bobby because he can not
live without help from civilization. Even though these characters posses many
of the same traits, their main differences are in their ability to survive life.
They also have different views on life. Lewis sees life as a game that you must
constantly challenge if you are to survive. Drew sees life as a struggle that
should ...
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Judith Guest's "Ordinary People": Summary
... but, in her own words "is an emotional cripple". Jared's
father, raised in an orphanage, seems anxious to please everyone, a commonplace
reaction of individuals who, as children, experienced parental indifference or
inconsistency. Though a successful tax attorney, he is jumpy around Conrad,
and, according to his wife, drinks too many martinis.
Conrad seems consumed with despair. A return to normalcy, school and
home-life, appear to be more than Conrad can handle. Chalk-faced, hair-hacked
Conrad seems bent on perpetuating the family myth that all is well in the world.
His family, after all, "are people of g ...
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Mary Astell's From A Serious Proposal To The Ladies
... her and her sisters from developing their minds. She
felt that females back then should have the same rights as women have achieved
through the Civil Rights Movement today. Her answer to this was "A Religious
Retirement." It is Mary Astell's ideal place to end her intellectual suffering
and open new doors for the female mind. I feel that Mary went a little to far
with this idea. She wanted to segregate males and females, live in a convent,
and find alternates to marriage for women, which, I guess, would be the same as
living in a convent. Mary was a feminist which I feel lead her to be so
aggressive in this propos ...
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Book Report On "A Dramatic Death"
... was Steve's girlfriend, Steve always
treated her like a sister but she wanted more than that and went to great
lengths to achieve.
CHARACTER ANALYSIS
The main characters in my book are Steve and Emma.
Steve was a popular good looking guy who all the girls liked. He didn't
like school that much expect the Dorking Drama Club where he acted in the
play, he had a sister and Steve was very careful to trust anyone during all
the murder.
Emma was very fond of Steve but because she was Steve's sister's friend for
so long Steve treated her as a sister, which she didn't like. Emma became
so fond of Steve that she star ...
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All Quiet On The Western Front
... Katczinsky, or Kat, was soon shown to be a master scavenger, being able to provide the group with food or virtually anything else; on this basis Paul and him grew quite close. Paul’s unit was assigned to lay barbed wire on the front line, and a sudden shelling resulted in the severe wounding of a recruit that Paul had comforted earlier. Paul and Kat again strongly questioned the War. After Paul’s company were returned to the huts behind the lines, Himmelstoss appeared and was insulted by some of the members of Paul’s unit, who were then only mildly punished. During a bloody battle, 120 of the men in Paul’s ...
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1984
... party.
The party engages in many activities that people would consider blatantly wrong. These include the changing of history with the objective of making the party look good. The worst thing about the party is that it makes up the things it has the people believe through its telecasts, which the entire population watches. The main character is Winston, who works for the Ministry of Truth, which is an ironic name since it makes up what the people are to believe. Winston has thoughts all the time against the party but luckily has never been caught by the thought police. He keeps on seeing some woman and eventuall ...
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"The Hobbit"
... the hobbit out of his quiet home, and
sending him in an adventure filled with dangers, dragons, gold, and most
certainly unpeaceful realms. As hobbits will do, Bilbo found himself on
enchanted paths, wishing he had never gone. He hoped to indeed live up to
Gandalf's standard of him, since he was the one who chose him to journey
into the desolate lands of Smaug, a golden-red dragon who had stolen
hoards of gold and silver wrought by the dwarves/ But. what was the use of
a Hobbit in the journey Bilb had answered his own question, when he
summoned the courage to save the dwarves from perils along the way, such ...
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Ursula Le Guin’s Use Of The Psychomyth
... and lying in his own excretions. The child can no longer speak like a human. The child is hastily fed a half bowl of corn meal and grease each day making its belly protrude and its legs so thin that there are no calves. The child has become mentally and physically deformed by this malnutrition and neglect. This is a representation of our very own sometimes gross existence.
Think about our own homeless people and how they are treated. We ignore the except to make fun and laugh. We find it repulsive how they are dirty, smelly, and often beg from us. Mentally or physically challenged people in our society oft ...
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"Miss Brill": Emptiness In One's Life
... that as humans age they begin to feel an emptiness in their lives and attempt to fill it with the actions of others.
Miss Brill, a very sagacious woman, seems despondent with her own life. She is well aware of her surroundings and takes the time to notice every technicality. Miss Brill notices small details such as the conductor's coat, the old man's walking stick, and the women's embroidered apron. She paid extra attention to the ermine toque. She noticed the way the gentleman ignored the woman and then just walked away. Miss Brill imagined that the band knew what the ermine toque was feeling and played softly ...
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