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Book Reports Essay Writing Help
Hamlet 4
Words: 562 / Pages: 3 .... violence (Joyce 4).” Ironically, her father has “begun to threaten her and say what he’d do to her only for her dead mother’s sake (Joyce 5).”
Eveline wants a new life but is afraid to let go of her past. She dreams of a place where “people would treat her with respect (Joyce 4)” and when contemplating her future, hopes “to explore a new life with Frank (Joyce 5).” When, in a moment of terror she realizes that “she must escape (Joyce 6),” it seems to steel her determination to make a new home for herself elsewhere. On the other hand, she is comfortable with the “familiar obj .....
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Summary Of "A Raisin In The Sun"
Words: 678 / Pages: 3 .... that is Travis's age no
longer lets her son play with Travis and he become hurt and confused.
Walter has to explain that many people that are white beleive that they are
better then those who are black. Travis who is stay in dismay and is
confused waits at home while Walter goes over to the neighbors house to
talk to them about what has happened. Walter is, in good reason, very angry
and annoyed by the racist whites. He goes over and at first tries his best
to stay calm over the situation. The white father then says, "Listen, if I
ever see your son with mine, I will througth that little black spoiled brat
back into your yard." Walter becomes enrage .....
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Jose Donoso's Paso: Summary
Words: 1192 / Pages: 5 .... from the theme to the setting.
So since it is known that traditionalism is a favored style by Donoso it
will make following the plot that much easier.
The plot of Paso is slow at first introducing the characters and
situation, but quickens towards the end. As the end draws to a close the
reader is left with a mixture of feelings from pity to happiness. This is
the result of traditional tail, it is intertwined with common feelings and
situations to which all can identify with that all are affected by the
story.
In the beginning the situation is introduced to the reader by a
narrator recounting the story from a childhood experience. It is known
q .....
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A Classic To Kill A Mockingbir
Words: 818 / Pages: 3 .... women…"(Lee 207), will be found guilty regardless of how good a case Atticus makes for him. There was substantial amount of evidence that suggests his innocence. Even the prosecution's two witnesses' stories contradicted each other. The jury did not give a guilty verdict it gave a racist verdict. Not a verdict based on fact, but a verdict based on the color of a man's skin. This is important because the author was not making this racism up; it was what it was like in those times. She is trying to show how ignorant and blind people can be just because of differences between them, as well as how society treats racial minorities.
During th .....
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Jem's Journal: Chapter Summary
Words: 1820 / Pages: 7 .... obedient and
spit the gum out. She told me that she had been chewing it all afternoon and
that if she wasn't dead and didn't feel sick. She was obviously mad at me for
ruining her chewing enjoyment but I didn't want her getting sick because knowing
Atticus, I'd be the one who would have to take care of her and that wouldn't go
over to well with me since I know I could have stopped her from getting sick. I
think I yelled at her and said that isn't she supposed to know that she isn't
allowed even near those trees. We all know about that weird guy Boo Radley and
we know that property is off limits. I told her that she would probably get
killed .....
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Caharacter Analysis Jay Gatsby
Words: 786 / Pages: 3 .... Secondly, Gatsby attempts to exemplify his wealth through fancy cars and stylish clothing. Gatsby shows his clothing to Daisy and informs her that he has a “man in England” who buys his clothes every season (Fitzgerald 97). Illustrating his wealth, Gatsby drives a Rolls Royce that “was a rich cream color, bright with nickel” (Fitzgerald 68). Although Gatsby’s foolish quest of the American dream exemplifies a respectable aspiration, it ends in a tragic death that goes virtually unnoticed. A sharp contrast to the parties , the funeral was sparingly attended and “nobody came” (Fitzgerald 182). Following the death of Gatsby Daisy leaves .....
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Sir Launcelot
Words: 648 / Pages: 3 .... knights: none could match you! You were the most formidable in
battle and the most courteous in manners; in the company of warriors the
most courageous, in the company of ladies the gentlest of men, and in a
righteous cause implacable…"
Launcelot is the model knight for the code of chivalry. Whether
through his prowess in battle or his largesse that everyone admired, he
ceaselessly fulfilled each aspect of the code. Throughout the book, he
exhibits both honor and loyalty to King Arthur and all his fellow knights.
Courtly love is another part of the code of Chivalry. Courtly love is love
often between one man and another man's wife. By havin .....
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Bram Stokers Dracula
Words: 747 / Pages: 3 .... there. However, a
group of friends, including an open-minded but ingenious professor, a
psychologist, an American, a rich man, as well as Jon an Harker and his
wife Mina, learn of the Count's sinister plan and pledge to destroy him
before he can create an army of un-dead vampires. They systematically
destroy his coffins with holy wafers and chase him out of England back to
Castle Dracula. There they carry out an ultimate plan to destroy Dracula.
The Author uses suspense as a storytelling device rather effectively
throughout the story. There are a fair number of parts in which the reader
is left suspended on the edge of seat, .....
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Prejudice And The Pain And Suffering It Has Caused
Words: 753 / Pages: 3 .... if not better. Aunt Alexandra is a bigot
and doesn't see the character of Calpurnia, just the color of her skin.
Another person who is treated like an inferior is Scout by her teacher,
because she knew how to read. "She discovered that I was literate and
looked at me with more than faint distaste. (p.17)." Scout is treated like
it is her fault that she knows more than the average child did. She
learned earlier than others so she gets punished unjustly. Tom Robinson is
also one who is discriminated by a biased community. Tom is found guilty
by the jury in his case against the Ewells (p.211). The guilty verdict is
a direct result of a racist .....
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The Pearl: Material Society, Material Thoughts
Words: 1020 / Pages: 4 .... 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 attacked
the trespasser. This is where the problems for Juana and her family began. The
fear that had mounted in Kino's body had taken control over his actions. Soon
even Juana who had al .....
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