Strength and growth come only through continuous effort and struggle (Napoleon Hill). In the book Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson, the tree is an important symbol of growth and courage through difficult times. The main character, Melinda, went through a series of unfathomable events over the summer that put her into a troublesome position. She was raped by a boy named Andy at a party while she was drunk. Scared and confused, she called the cops to come help her, resulting in her losing all her friends.
Annotated Bibliography Gibbons, Gail. (2012). The Moon Book. New York, NY: Scholastic Inc.
The author’s foreshadowing, irony, and symbolism help convey the idea that family is more important than money or material possessions. The author uses irony of saying their life is happy because they have a lot of money, although they are not living a happy life shows that you do not need money to live a happy life, money cannot buy happiness. The children acting wild and powerful is because they symbolize the lions that killed their parents. If the children get to carried away and not pay attention to their family, they will shut them out of their lives. Also, when the parents found a wallet with lion saliva on it, that foreshadows there will soon be danger, which was their death.
For the first ‘bare’ part of her life, Janie is a mule not to a man but to her own grandmother. In her youth, Janie yearns for relationships and objects that to her symbolize freedom. She is drawn to a blossoming pear tree because of how its “barren brown stems [turn] to glistening leaf-buds; from the leaf-buds from snowy virginity” (10), Here, Janie is awed by something changed from ‘barren’ to beautiful as she struggles with the suppression of her grandmother, who goes on to bash Janie for kissing a boy through a gatepost. It is clear Janie associates the pear tree with freedom, as she was avoiding her chores to sit under it. Thus, the beauty she finds in the turn from stem to blossom is directly correlated with the joy she finds in the escape from her grandmother and discovery of freedom.
Melinda has to overcome the past and learn from her fears to thrive. In the book the tree symbolizes Melinda's growth, to overcome fears and to progress you need to learn from the past. To start, the journey of Melinda’s growth she chooses a topic for her art class that she will be working on all year. When Melinda pulls her topic out she is disappointed. “I plunge my hand into the bottom of the globe and fish out my paper.
Two of those topic are things most teenagers face at this age. That is a greater reason why we as ninth graders should read “ A tree grows in Brooklyn”. First of all, the book “A tree grows in Brooklyn” can teach many of us how knowledge is important. In the book, as Francie grows up, she coming out of her innocence. She starts to grow up.
The writer make you experience how it feels like when your parents do not care where you go and they ignore you from being with them as important part of the family. I think the story explain how the children want to be heroes because they want to be something valuable. And the body was the chance to escape from their surrounding and be with someone who can understand them and having wonderful experience in the wood in order to be heroes. Finally, I think writer choose the story to be about children because it make you feel more passionate with them. How they feel and how they went over the hardships through their journey in when they try to find
Despite the fact that the tree was ten feet tall and she and Neeley were so small and frail she still had hope and believed that they had a chance at catching it without falling down once it was chucked at them. Having hope makes Francie more confident in herself and allows her to maintain a positive attitude which motivates her. It distracts her from the unhappiness around her and hope combined with faith and thankfulness allows her to find happiness within small things which come her way in her poverty-stricken life. Moreover, Francie demonstrates the virtue of love on various occasions through out the book. This is evident when Francie notices the favouritism Katie has towards Neeley.
“Mom and Dad smiled at each other and laughed. It was a sound that Tree hadn’t heard from them in the longest time” (132). This shows how Tree wasn’t sure his parents were ever going to get along again, but they end up having a good time. This is an example of how family matters most and hope is always around. This situation gave Tree strength to preserve.
From this point of view, particularly in this novel the main important events are, the expressions of Hurston and Janie unity. Although mostly this novel has been told in third-person wise, while the sentences are certain like "So this was marriage!" “She saw a dust-bearing bee sink into the sanctum of a bloom; the thousand sister-calyxes arch to meet the love embrace and the ecstatic shiver of the tree from root to tiniest branch creaming in every blossom and frothing with delight” (Hurston 13). This means Janie reverberates with the sexuality of the springtime flash, and till end of the book, the pear tree helps as her typical of sexual and emotional success.
Despite some opposition to the novel, The Giving Tree should be a book on every teacher and parent’s reading list. However, it should be taught age appropriately. First, Colorado thought the book was sexist because it portrayed the boy as being selfish and wanting all of the tree’s belongings and the tree as a female giving in
Growing Up Through Experience Readers of The Monkey Garden view the short story in many different ways. They interpret the monkey and the monkey garden as many different things. The monkey garden physically stays the same, but changes from the narrator 's mental aspect from the beginning to the end of the story. Interpretations on what exactly the monkey actually represents varies. Youth and innocence represent the best symbols of what the monkey really is from the point of view of the story .
The Explanation of the Story: “The Thing in the Forest” by A.S. Byatt In A.S. Byatt’s “The Thing in the Forest”, the author uses the elements of a short story to craft a dark, fairy tale. The title of the story, “The Thing in the Forest”, in the sense that it foreshadows the main idea of the story. The audience expects more than just a "thing", as listed in the title. Byatt emphasizes that the main characters are the two-main protagonist who were girls dealing with more than just a “thing” in the forest that affected them for the rest of their lives. this is the use of symbols that expresses a meaning to focus on the story.
As he trespasses the stairs and the kitchen, the smell of victory is patiently waiting on the other side, unraveling what was truly waiting for him all this time. “Far from the Tree”, written by Robin Benway, brings focus to a boy named Joaquin, a foster child growing up in countless foster homes his whole life. He comes to a realization that he has 2 biological siblings named Grace and Maya, and begins to talk to them as well. His life has always been bordered with foster care, and this makes Joaquin extremely detached from his sisters, since they were white and had already been adopted with loving families. Joaquin has amazing foster parents, but he is not prepared to be adopted like his sisters.
For adults, happiness requires more calculation and reasoning which agrees with both my definition and Aristotle’s definition of happiness. The happiness experienced by adults is more sophisticated. Adults tend to make themselves happy with what they have. Dan Gilbert, a Harvard psychologist and happiness expert, calls this synthetic happiness. He defines synthetic happiness as, “what we make when we don’t get what we wanted.”