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Book Reports Essay Writing Help
Heart Of Darkness
Words: 561 / Pages: 3 .... , three evident themes include death, corruption, and despair. During Marlow’s journey into the “,” death, corruption, and despair became the manifest themes of the novel. First of all, Marlow came face to face with death several times throughout his voyage. Marlow finds out about the death of Kurtz, the climax of the novel, when the manager’s boy said to Marlow, “Mistah Kurtz—he dead” (Conrad 64). Another death occurs when the attack on the steamer leaves the helmsmen dead with “the shaft of a spear in the side just below the ribs” (Conrad 64). Marlow decides to “[tip] him overboard” because “if [his] late helmsmen was to be .....
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Analysis Of Children's Fairy Tales
Words: 4150 / Pages: 16 .... I again noticed that most of the settings were
peculiar in some way or another. Rarely would I read of a setting of an
ordinary place such as what you and I may live in. they always had
something mystical about them. Only places that children dreamed about were
used. These were places such as palaces, and Kingdoms, mystical forests or
a witches castle. One story was of a lonely cabin located in a mystical
forest. I suppose places like these were used to provoke the children
imagination.
Many of the themes I found to be quite common. I quite often found them
to be about a boy and a girl and them getting together. There was also
usually some .....
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The Red Badge Of Courage
Words: 1120 / Pages: 5 .... novel covers only two days in the life of Henry Flemming, the main character. In that amount of time, war can turn a boy into a man. It does not physically turn an individual into a grown man, but it mentally matures them. War matures boys into a men is by experiencing new, unpredictable environments and adjusting to unfamiliar smells, sounds, and emotions. Think about it, being there on a battlefield witnessing deaths of friends and comrades would have to have an effect on a human being. Being in a war and to be around new faces, new personalities, confusion, and trauma would force one to adapt to an environment faster than you usually would .....
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The Great Gatsby: The American Dream
Words: 965 / Pages: 4 .... and then finally settles down with Tom Buchanan of New Orleans. Once Gatsby acquires his goal, he moves just to be near Daisy. Jordan explains, “Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be across the bay.” In order for him to see her, he holds extravagant parties, hoping that she will attend. She does not, however, so Gatsby casually asks around to find out if anyone knows her. Eventually, Gatsby soon realizes that Nick Carraway, his neighbor, is Daisy’s cousin. Gatsby then devises a plan to at last see his beloved Daisy. Jordan sets up the meeting for
Gatsby with Nick, “He wants to know if you’ll invite Daisy to your house some a .....
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Themes Of Death And Desire In
Words: 2565 / Pages: 10 .... the skin of conventionality to reveal the true motivations of the characters, focusing on Blanches apparent fall to madness, and culminating in her eventual rape by her brother-in-law Stanley.
It is important to understand what Williams means when he talks of death to the reporter. For Williams the fact of being dead or the act of death is not important, but it is the pain that precedes it. This has metaphorical significance which resonates throughout the play. Though the characters do not physically die it is in their inevitable downfall that we see the symbolic pain of death. In all the characters it is clear that their unbridled desires, the .....
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The Island Of Doctor Moreau: Could It Be?
Words: 1209 / Pages: 5 .... to start a new life. It was very hard as I imagined that all that I saw was not as it seemed. I met a woman –a scientist- named Catherine Plumeria. I told her about the island and my experience on it. It was only a natural reaction from my story that she thought I was crazed. We sat and talked about it for hours until I finally convinced her that this did actually happen to me. She asked me if I had ever thought about going back to the island and I said no. I guess her curiosity had gotten the best of her because she said she thought that we should try to go back to the island to see what had become of it. I told her there was no way of knowin .....
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To Kill A Mockingbird 3
Words: 2678 / Pages: 10 .... is a black man that was accused of raping Mayella Ewell. Bob Ewell is Mayella's father. He is out for revenge on Atticus for what he did to him and his daughter. Mayella is Bob's daughter who supposedly got raped by Tom Robinson. Judge Taylor is the Judge of Maycomb County. Heck Tate is the county law official.
Atticus tells his children: "I prefer you shoot tin cans, but I know you'll wanna shoot birds, if you can hit 'em. Shoot all the Blue Jays you want, but never shoot a Mockingbird. All they do for us is sing their hearts out for us. Remember it's a sin to kill a Mockingbird". The Mockingbirds in this story are Boo Radley and Tom Robinson. .....
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"Beware Of The Fish" By Gordan Korman: A Review
Words: 300 / Pages: 2 .... man named Mr. Sturgeon(a.k.a
'The Fish'. A sturgeon is a kind of fish.) It all started when Elmer
Drimsdale, school genius invented somethingthat is sort of like a television
broadcaster. He didn't know it really worked!!!!
When Bruno and Boots found out their school was broke and needed more
money, Bruno began to think up schemes to put their school on the map.All his
attempts seemed to fail, so he vented his anger on the television broadcaster,
not knowing it actually worked. He accidently broadcasted many announcements,
declaring 'The Fish' will seek his revenge. During these broadcasts, the video
camera was focused on a poster of a salmon.
Th .....
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How Does H.G. Wells Create Tension In: The Red Room
Words: 3157 / Pages: 12 .... fallen down the stairs, supposedly running away from a ghost. This adds tension because it makes the reader wonder what is going to happen to the narrator as he does not believe that the castle is haunted. The way that the past suspicious happenings appear in the middle of the story also creates a lot of tension, as reading from the beginning, the reader does not know the circumstances responsible for the fear felt by the three residing custodians.
"for he had opened the door and fallen headlong down the steps I had just ascended."
"the tale of a timid wife and the tragic end that came to her husband's jest of frightening her."
The story begins w .....
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Flowers For Algernon 2
Words: 866 / Pages: 4 .... of his
mind. He gets a new awareness of himself and others. He also makes the
realization that some people he had put on a pedestal are not as good as
they seem. He also starts to think about romance.
Miss Kinnian, or Alice as he later in the book calls her, is
Charlie’s night school teacher and then a romantic interest and then a
teacher again. She liked the old Charlie, but when he starts becoming
smart she finds it harder and harder to keep up with him. Being with him
makes her feel strange, inadequate at times. She’s almost afraid of him.
She thinks she knows Charlie, but discovers she doesn’t.
The people .....
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