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Book Reports Essay Writing Help
The Summary Of Grisham's "The Client"
Words: 570 / Pages: 3 .... man came out of the car and set a water hose in his
exhaust pipe, Mark knew at that point the mans purpose was suicide. Mark
took it upon himself not to let this man kill himself because he felt it
was his obligation. After Mark freed the hose from the cars exhaust pipe
several times he was caught by the man and dragged into the car to die
with him. In the car Mark learned the mans story. He was a Mafia layer who
represented the biggest and meanest Mafia man in the country “Barry the
Blade Mulando.” His client had killed a senator and buried the body so no
evidence would be found, only this lawyer and his client and now Mark knew
where it was bur .....
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Emerson's Self-Reliance
Words: 376 / Pages: 2 .... to make it through life, because it is not absolutely necessary to sustain life. If you did have to be accepted to sustain life, there would be a lot of dead people in the world.
Have you ever heard the saying, "if a tree falls in the woods, would it make a sound?" Well if you have, you will notice a lot of similar things in it and Thoreau's saying, "the sky is less grand when it shuts down over less worth in the population." They are both saying that if something happened and nobody was around would it have the same affect as it would if many people saw it. Thoreau was saying that the sunset is not as beautiful when only a few people see .....
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The Ballad Of The Sad Cafe: Love And Attraction
Words: 720 / Pages: 3 .... Yet, the
people of the small, southern town of Cheehaw accept her quirkiness because of
the equisite wine that she sells in her store and for her free doctoring and
homemade remedies. Still, everyone is shocked when the handsome outlaw,
Marvin Macy, falls in love with her.
Marvin is a "bold, fearless, and cruel" man who changes his unlawful
ways to win Miss Amelia's love. Rather than robbing houses he begins attending
church services on Sunday mornings. In an effort to court Miss Amelia, he
learns proper etiquette, such as "rising and giving his chair to a lady, and
abstaining from swearing and fighting". Two years after Marvin's re .....
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Juror 10
Words: 491 / Pages: 2 .... outa those places are real trash”. Clearly it can be seen that he has a certain unfounded prejudice towards the defendant, viewing him as a liar and a piece of trash, with no supporting evidence. This prejudice most surely influences his verdict of ‘guilty’ without view of any evidence. If that is not enough, starting on page 62 begins a speech lasting 2 pages in which he spews out his views of people like the defendant: “Human life doesn’t mean as much to them as it does to us…And they are-wild animals.”
is an impatient and uncaring/unconcerned person. It is made clear by viewing his lines that does not t .....
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The Catcher In The Rye
Words: 4324 / Pages: 16 .... He decides to leave school a few days than what he is supposed to in an attempt to deal with his current situation. “Besides, I sort of needed a little vacation. My nerves were shot. They really were.” Caulfield goes to New York to take a vacation before having to face his parents’ inevitable wrath. During this time, he experiences a nervous breakdown that was characterized by his sudden unexplained depressions. “What I really felt like, though, was committing suicide.” “I felt so lonesome, all of a sudden.” Before his eventual nervous collapse he experienced impulsive spending and generally odd, erratic be .....
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Tess Of The D'Ubervilles: Environments And The Feels Of The Characters
Words: 648 / Pages: 3 .... she could not escape Alec either. She was trapped there in an awful
environment with no way out. Tess did eventually find a way out of the
Herons and out of Alec. She finally finished him off by stabbing him in
the heart, symbolically breaking his heart as he had done to her years ago.
Once he was dead, Tess was free of her sin and could finally have the love
of Angel unhindered by her past. She had killed her past in the house
which was slowly killing her.
The next residence for Tess after the murder was in an abandoned mansion:
Bramshurst Court. This was the perfect place for Tess and Angel to escape
to. She wished for nothing more than t .....
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The Lottery
Words: 390 / Pages: 2 .... that she was chosen. Mrs. Hutchinson says that it is “not fair”, regarding the final results of . was something she looked forward to until the outcome of was forced upon her. The entire population of the town participates in the tradition of . This shows that the whole community releases a part of their evil onto others. They are all eager to see someone beaten with rocks, however none of them want it to be them. Even the town’s children were involved in the savage ritual. After Tessie Hutchinson was chosen some of the towns children gave some pebbles to her son so he too could participate in the torture of his own mother. This horrible trad .....
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To Kill A Mocking Bird: Injustice
Words: 341 / Pages: 2 .... he was black, which really shows the amount of injustice during the time the novel was set in. Through the whole trial, he did not retaliate at the white people, he did not get mad because he was improperly accused, he just showed the level of respect which everyone deserves. He handled the injustice with a manner reserved only for gentlemen, which is a good description of what he really was.
The third person to suffer injustice in the novel was Boo Radley. Many accusations were claimed about him even though they were untrue. Just because he didn't leave his house, people began to think something was wrong. Boo was a man who was misunderstood an .....
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The Odyssey - Comparing The Ro
Words: 851 / Pages: 4 .... and independent characters that help him on his heroic journey. The women in The Odyssey are essential in Homer’s poem: they not only act as a voice of reason and care, but are the deceptive and deceiving characters that add an intangible mystery.
In “Rustler’s Rhapsody”, Miss Tracy and the C.B.’s daughter are the only female characters. They both portray the stereotype of incipit debutantes who are instantly attracted to the handsome hero. The C.B.’s daughter is an inept character who gets dragged across the desert by her horse “Wildfire”, only to be saved by Rex O’ Herolan. In that pa .....
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“Tintern Abbey” And “Intimations Ode”: Natural Peace
Words: 326 / Pages: 2 .... and peaceful, advocating that it has solitude.
Wordsworth also implies in lines 105-110 of the mind not only receiving sensations from the outside world, but it also half-creates them. In Wordsworth, a sensation is formed by imagining his childhood in a series of stages in the development with nature. The sensation is based on nature but is also shaped by the poet’s mind. The thought revolves around the serenity that nature has brought to his life.
In “Intimations of Immortality” Wordsworth states “Yet in my heart of hearts I feel your might” (line 89) as to perceive nature as a part of man spirit. The part of man spirit man can roam .....
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