Search
  HOME
  JOIN NOW
  QUESTIONS
  CONTACT US
ESSAY TOPICS
:: Arts & Movies
:: Biographies
:: Book Reports
:: Computers
:: Creative Writing
:: Economics
:: Education
:: English
:: Geography
:: Health
:: Legal
:: Miscellaneous
:: Music
:: Politics
:: Religion
:: Sciences
:: Society
:: US History
:: World History
MEMBER LOGIN
Username: 
Password: 

Forgot Password



Book Reports Essay Writing Help

Ernest Hemingway: Allegorical Figures In The Sun Also Rises
Words: 1198 / Pages: 5

.... romantic. F. Private grief with Cohn's public suffering. G. Strongly attracted to Pedro Romero. H. Later, when Barnes says that he hates “homos” and wants to hit them. III. Lady Brett Ashley. A. First appears with a group of homosexuals. B. Wears man's hat on short hair. C. Refers to men as fellow “chaps”. D. All complete distortion of sexual roles. E. The war has turned Brett into the equality of a man. F. This is like Jakes demasculation. G. All releases her from her womanly nature. H. “Steps off of the romantic pedestal to stand beside her equals. IV. Ro .....


Frankenstien All Behavior Is L
Words: 608 / Pages: 3

.... development, he got his first experience of hate and fear. The monster had the same needs that a child would. Like a child at birth, the monster should have received love and care. Instead Victor, his father, hated the monster and ran from it. The monster later encountered a poor farming family. The monster watched the way that the different family members interacted with one another. In his observation of them he learned the lessons that his father had neglected to teach him. The monster learned the concepts of love and affection. When the monster watched the family he felt feelings of happiness, instead of feelings of loneliness. Eventua .....


The Joy Luck Club: Differences In Generations
Words: 688 / Pages: 3

.... women during World War II, where "we feasted, we laughed, we played games, lost and won, we told the best stories. And each week, we could hope to be lucky. That hope was our only joy." (p. 12) Really, this was their only joy. The mothers grew up during perilous times in China. They all were taught "to desire nothing, to swallow other people’s misery, to eat [their] own bitterness." (p. 241) Though not many of them grew up terribly poor, they all had a certain respect for their elders, and for life itself. These Chinese mothers were all taught to be honorable, to the point of sacrificing their own lives to keep any family members’ promise. Instead .....


Demian
Words: 974 / Pages: 4

.... significant dream occurs on page nineteen. Emil dreams that he is on a boat, "surrounded by absolute peace and the glow of a holiday." He dreams of how his sisters' "white summer dresses shimmer in the sun." As Emil awakes he describes himself having fallen "out of paradise back into reality, again face to face with the enemy, with his evil eye." This dream is very sinificant in that it shows Emil's departure from the absolute "good" world into one of "evil." Emil has had first experience with lying, which he did to Kromer, that opened the door to more evil. Emil now finds himself jumping at every command Kromer throws to him. Emil begins t .....


Antigone 2
Words: 622 / Pages: 3

.... brothers at the hands of one another. Then the reader learns that one of the brothers, Polynices, has been left out to die without a proper burial. At this time the reader begins to feel pity for the two sisters. They have lost their father and their two brothers all at the same time. Later in the conversation the reader learns that Antigone has a plan to bury here brother Polynices and that she wants Ismene to help her. Ismene is scared to do this because the new king, Creon, has issued a decree that says that any person that attempts to bury the body will be sentenced to death. The fact that Antigone is going to attempt to bury the body creates f .....


The Adventures Of Huckleberry
Words: 898 / Pages: 4

.... with Jim, societies attitude towards Jim during their travel up the Mississippi River, and the use of racist terminology throughout the novel. Mark Twain’s use of satire in the novel Finn enables the reader to better understand his message of slavery. First, Huck’s relationship with Jim shows the authors views on slavery. Huck was taught at home and in school that slavery was a part of the natural order. He never found anything wrong with the way slaves were treated. In the beginning of Huck and Jim’s journey Huck treats Jim in a prejudice manor (according to our standards) in the way that Jim is different from him. .....


Critical Analysis Of The Jungl
Words: 894 / Pages: 4

.... things. There is a bibliography in the back which lists all of his sources for information on meatpacking and his other documentation. For the most part it is historically accurate, as it tells the life of a man who works in a realistic meat packing setting. Because it is fictional, though, it probably would not be much of an aid to a historical researcher. The novel itself, containing over Three hundred pages, is rather long and tediously boring. Sinclair’s central purpose in writing The Jungle was to persuade people to join the socialist party and to adopt the view that socialism is the only way to conquer the capitalistic empires that .....


Comparison Of London's White Fang And The Call Of The Wild
Words: 1154 / Pages: 5

.... these were the two most famous novels he had written. The Call of the Wild was Jack London's most famous novel,"This is the novel that separated London from all writers of that era."(Brooks 35) Written in 1904 it was a story about a dog who was brought into Klondike to pull sleds during the gold rush. The name Call of the Wild comes from the natural instinct that animals have to be free in nature. The main characters in this story are Buck the four- year-old half Saint Bernard and half-Scottish shepherd, John Thorton and the Scottish half-breed. Buck was stolen from his home in California during the gold-rush in the Klondike. Dogs were a ne .....


Great Gatsby 4
Words: 833 / Pages: 4

.... dream in life was to be with Daisy. The green light on the other side of the bay that Gatsby saw gave him an unyielding hope that his dream would be realized. At the end of the first chapter Gatsby was seen stretching his arms toward the green light appearing as to be worshipping it. Gatsby saw his dream or goal and never gave up. He remained loyal to his quest until death at the end of the novel. Gatsby moved into the mansion across the bay to be near Daisy. The green light symbolized that Gatsby had a hope of winning Daisy. Gatsby asked Daisy to tell Tom that she loved him, but this was too much to ask of her. Daisy told Gatsby that he .....


A Woman Mourned By Daughters: An Analysis
Words: 448 / Pages: 2

.... on the bed” (Lines 11-14). The describe her on her death bed. “ Like a corpse pulled from the sea”. In the fourth section (Lines 15-20) they discuss that what upsets them now that she is gone, isn't the fact that she died, it is all the things that she used to do to them. A knot forms in their throats (“what rises in our throats like the food you prodded in”) as they think about how they used to be treated. After the mother dies, the daughters are left with several responsibilities which are discussed in the next section (Lines 22-28). These responsibilities are not ones which the daughters would be happy to take care of. They are .....



« prev  227  228  229  230  231  232  233  234  235  236  next »

   Copyright 2024 EssayInn.com
   All Rights Reserved.
> Home Page > Join Now > Questions > Cancel > Contact Us