In the Juvie Three author Gordon Korman tries to teach you that there is sometimes in life second chances and if you're willing to take that chance it will work out in the end. 3 Mischievous kids in The Juvie Three, Gecko Arjay and Terence get into trouble, All three boys are serving time in juvenile detention until they get a second chance. Douglas Healy a former inmate is in a halfway house in New York. Until one night the boys get into a fight and Douglas tries to break it up.
In chapter 3 Credo, the reader finally establishes a much broader view of Richard Rodriguez and his family’s ties to the Catholic religion. Earlier in the book, Rodriguez would mention periods during his childhood where he came in contact with nuns and catholicism. In chapter 1 for instance, he reveals the first encounter the nuns in school had with his family at home about the lack of English. Rodriguez contends that his parents instantly agreed because “How could they have questioned the church’s authority which those women represented? (20).
In chapter 16 Henry Petroski talks about the horrible present situation of today’s road building industry. Henry indicates, the essence of flocculants outside its defeat garrulous among them, that is the current situation of road building industry. First Henry gives us some typical examples of fraud and abuse within and outside government. Recently, in North Carolina, an executive road paving company guilty to charges of conspiracy to defraud the US Transportation department and also conspiracy to laundry money. This case involves thirty-seven federal construction contractors.
March: book one is a very intriguing memoir from the eyes of John Lewis. It starts off on the day of the inauguration of then president-elect Barack Obama. A couple of children and their mother step into Congressman John Lewis’s office to take a look. Their mother wanted to educate them on the civil rights movement. To their surprise, John Lewis walks in.
The book “The Other Wes Moore” talks about two young kids that has same name, lives in the same neighborhood, but has different destinies. The author Wes mother Joy was a single mother, as the other Wes mother Mary by different circumstances. Also, an important play roll at the book is that both mothers wants to give them education and be successful for the author and the other Wes. Both Wes are going in the same path of getting into trouble and being rebels. They are acting unreasonably by taking the wrong decisions they might.
In chapter four of Nightjohn by Gary Paulsen, Sarny experiences a traumatic event. Sarny and the other slaves had to witness Alice, a girl that dreams a lot getting whipped badly by the master. Unfortunately, the cause of her getting whip was that she wandered off near the White House and the slaves weren't allowed to be there. The slaves had to watch Alice dripping blood and numerous cuts while she was being whipped so they would know what to expect if they did something like that. Additionally, an old man named Jim couldn’t take no more and had enough which made him tried to leave.
In chapter four of Nightjohn by Gary Paulsen has many details that show how cruel slavery was. In the beginning of the chapter we learn about Alice who was whipped because of how she went to the master white house. After that Sarny remembers two men who wanted to run from the plantation. This includes Jim who was older and wanted freedom, he ran but was caught, when he was hanging from a tree he was mauled by the dogs and died hanging from the tree, The second person was Pawlee who had a girlfriend from another plantation and so he fell asleep and as he woke up and started walking toward the plantation and Waller found him and let the dogs hurt him and then he was whipped to death by Waller.
Victor Rios begins chapter six by describing the way the Latino boys he studied used masculinity as a rehabilitative tool. He describes how the boys are constantly “questioning” each other’s manhood as a way of proving their own masculinity. “The boys’ social relations with one another and with community members were saturated with expressions and discourses of manhood” (pg.125). Rios continues to describe the affects criminalization and its gendered practices has influenced these young boy’s mentality of what it means to be masculine. In chapter six, the author explains that although the boys had easy access to weapons, they rarely used them because of their clear understanding the consequences associated with such violence.
According to Howard Thurman in Chapter One, the conventional Christian word is muffled, confused, and vague. Thurman discusses how there is no basic relationship between just having the simple practice of brotherhood in relations of life and the ethical pretensions of our faith. Thurman states how for years we have studied different people of the world, and how the one’s living next to us as our neighbors as objects of missionary work. He comments how we don’t treat them at all as if they are our brother or sisters in Christ.
Danielle L. McGuire’s At the Dark End of the Street, “an important, original contribution to civil rights historiography”, discusses the topic of rape and sexual assault towards African American women, and how this played a major role in causing the civil rights movement (Dailey 491). Chapter by chapter, another person's story is told, from the rape of Recy Taylor to the court case of Joan Little, while including the significance of Rosa Parks and various organizations in fighting for the victims of unjust brutality. The sole purpose of creating this novel was to discuss a topic no other historian has discussed before, because according to McGuire they have all been skipping over a topic that would change the view of the civil rights movement.
Quite often in this nonfiction work, the author, Jay Nordlinger breaks away from the formal format that nonfiction works tend to take and offers a brief paragraph or two to clear the readers’ minds. In the midst of facts and figures of different dictators and children, Nordlinger addresses his audience, explains his writing methods and offers guidance. In these passages, Nordlinger breaks away from the chains of formal language and uses personal pronouns. For instance in Mao’s chapter, he states, “I will now present to you a blizzard of names, and those names tend to be tricky to the Western eye” (Nordlinger 66).
In the Chapter One, Henry A. Rosso cites Hank’s explanation of the “fundraising is the servant of philanthropy” that “It is justified when it is used as a responsible invitation guiding contributors to make the kind of gift that will meet their own special needs and add greater meaning to their lives” (p.5). Also, Hank’s said “Fundraising is not an end in itself” (p.4). A fundraiser has to figure out the organization’s mission and design a fundraising mission. Next, the fundraiser can reach the correct potential donors and help them to donate the gift efficiently. An excellent fundraising can fulfill the organization’s mission; meanwhile, it may lead the donors to make a wisely decision.
It goes without saying that living at home with your mother when you’re a middle-aged man isn’t always the best thing to do. Brian Peck learned that the hard way when he snapped and decided to do the unthinkable to his mother when she got on his nerves. Allegedly, Peck was in his bedroom listening to music when his mother knocked on the door and asked him to turn it down because she was trying to sleep. Instead of complying, Peck lost his temper and attacked his mother.
ur ability to make decisions in less than two seconds is an interesting ability that belongs to our subconscious mind, demonstrated through journalist, Malcolm Gladwell’s National Bestseller Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking. Gladwell’s use of logic, rhetorical questions, and anecdotes to inform readers fascinated with psychology, about our subconscious decision making. Gladwell appeals to logic to add to his credibility and factual tone. In chapter three of Blink, Malcolm Gladwell is stating the reasoning behind certain males being chosen as CEOs of companies is related to tallness. Gladwell backs up his theory by using statistics and facts, “ Among CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, that number is 58 percent.
Diary of a Wimpy Kid #9: The Long Haul (English) by Jeff KGreg narrates that his mother Susan announces that the family are going on a road trip, interrupting him and his brothers watching television on a day during summer vacation. While packing for the trip, the family find out that they have too many belongings, Greg's father Frank suggests they use his boat he bought to store the extra essentials. During the drive, Susan takes out a Flat Stanley and takes some pictures with it. After the drive, the Heffley family arrive at a grocery store, where Susan sends Greg's older brother Rodrick to purchase food. The Heffleys then arrive at a run-down motel, at which point it is revealed that Rodrick purchased junk food instead of the healthy food