Dead Girls Don’t Lie By: Jennifer Shaw Wolf Summary Losing a friend could be devastating, but thinking your friend was murdered and being the last person they talk to can leave a huge amount of guilt. The book Dead Girls Don’t Lie is about Jaycee losing her best friend Rachel. In the eyes of Jaycee she thinks her best friend was murdered in an old house in the woods, but the police think her death was an accident.
A story can do so much for a person. It can teach you. It can provide comfort. It can make you a better person. And in the book, Moon Over Manifest by Clare Vanderpool, the stories Miss Sadie tells help Abilene develop a better understanding of her father, and give her a sense of belonging.
"Crossing the Swamp," a poem by Mary Oliver, confesses a struggle through "pathless, seamless, peerless mud" to a triumphant solitary victory in a "breathing palace of leaves. " Oliver's affair with the "black, slack earthsoup" is demonstrated as she faces her long coming combat against herself. Throughout this free verse poem, the wild spirit of the author is sensed in this flexible writing style. While Oliver's indecisiveness is obvious throughout the text, it is physically obvious in the shape of the poem itself.
Camp Harmony, written by Monica Shone, tells a story about her life in an internment camp. During World War ll, Japanese Americans had to move into internment camps, they had no choice. The camp that Shone moved into was called Camp Harmony and it was ironic how the name wasn't even close to how the camp really was. "Our home was one room, about eighteen by twenty feet, the size of a living room." (Shone 320)
Accept Taking sips of waking up. Warmth cupped in my hands. The maroon mug my mother gave me on a day when I didn’t want to be me. It was any day. Any year.
Radium Girls is a play inspired by true events. In 1926, radium was a miracle cure, making Madame Curie an international celebrity. Through radium, luminous watches began to take the world by storm. However, this storm hit a group of girls hard – the girls who painted the watches began to fall ill, resulting in fatalities. Worse yet, no one knew why the girls were dying.
The book I read was People of the Sparks by Jeanne DuPrau. The book is about all the people of Ember getting to this village that got out of a depression a few years ago and they are finally back up on their feet. Some of the people of Sparks don't like that the council people let the Emberties just settle in their village. The book is mostly about how the Emberties struggle to adapt and how they come to peace with the people of Spark. The narrator is someone from outside the story, so the point of view is third person.
No one other than Sharon Draper could pull of being such a talented person with so many accomplishments in life. Sharon Draper has written many children's books and influences many people’s lives. Sharon Draper’s works, Forged by Fire and Out of My Mind, themes connect to her life because she has known people who have been abused, who have been disabled, and she can can connect and understand the people who have had struggles in their life. Sharon Draper is an American author, poet, public speaker, and master educator. She was previously a teacher at Cincinnati Public Schools from 1970 to 1997.
One follower had stood out in particular for the Shining Path. Maritza Lecca Garrido seemed unlikely to be a high-ranking Sendero member, yet alone politically engaged. She was a middle-class citizen devoted to dancing and Catholicism. Reasons for her association with the Shining Path are unknown, possibly being personal. With her circumstance, she could have been trying to make sense of all the chaos occurring in Peru and wished to become useful to society despite her seemly frivolous occupation.
“We live in a world where we rarely speak out and when someone does, often nobody is there to listen,” is a quote by Jaycee Dugard in her memoir A Stolen Life. Authors must be able to appeal to their readers in order for the story to be heard. While writing, they consider using multiple different tones and stylistic choices to entice an audience. In A Stolen Life, Jaycee Dugard utilizes a concerned tone and matter-of-fact style in order to express her emotions, provide readers with ample knowledge of her situation, and reflect on her life experiences. Jaycee Dugard never expected her childhood to be taken away.
In the short story “The Story of an Hour”, By Kate Choplin was about a main character named Louise Mallard, who had a tremendous change in her life. The open window and the independence Louise Mallard is experiencing is a forbidden pleasure that represents her way of new life and opportunity. The life of Louise Mallard was always been in control by his husband and she never gets any freedom until the news she receive about the death of his husband Brentley Mallard. Mrs. Mallard reaction to the death of her husband was “She wept at once,” this describe how she felt when they told her about his husband was “killed” (Para 2, Line 6), she felt as she was hopeless and not herself anymore and that she will always be the wife material of Brentley Mallard.
From NYCB in the late '70's and early '80's, NYC was just a few years away from the very low period of being the verge of bankruptcy in the mid-'70's, and all you heard was "crime, crime, crime." Elderly women walking slowly at night were considered prime targets, and it was a general phenomenon that they attended arts performances at matinees, along with the typical smattering of kids who could only go on weekends (and when NYCB rep was considered palatable). So when you have an audience that self-limits itself to one or two performances a week, you don't have to serve shrimp appetizers, but can serve pigs-in-blankets instead. (Or you serve Green Giant green beans instead of the No Frills label, even if the cans have the same beans with different labels.) You offer the really good mustard -- a Farrell here, a McBride there -- so that this audience doesn't feel completely taken for granted and stop subscribing (back then) or coming.
“No matter how much falls on us, we keep plowing ahead. That's the only way to keep the roads clear.” the wise Greg Kincaid says. This explains resilience and that you can overcome bad situations with hard work and perseverance. In A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansberry, this kind of resilience connects with Beneatha Younger.
Sophia Galvan Mr. Chomin Grade 9 English 24 January 2023 Melinda's Hurt A little girl left on the doorsteps of childhood, growing, becoming her own person, living life for what it's worth. takes the turn to the worse parts of life. That little girl, Melinda Sordino, had barely just started her life when she was already silenced She had friends, people, and a safe space until a senior named Andy Evans attacked her one night and turned the little girl into less of a human. Melinda felt unloved and was destroyed after what happened that one summer night at the party.
On September 11, 2001, tragedy struck the city of New York. On that fateful day, two airplanes were hijacked by terrorists and flew straight into the twin towers. Each tower fell completely to the ground, taking thousands of lives with it and injuring thousands more. Not only did that day leave thousands of families without their loved ones, it also left an entire city and an entire country to deal with the aftermath of the destruction. Poet, Nancy Mercado, worries that one day people will forget that heartbreaking day.