This book is a must read for anyone wanting new in-sight or just learning about the history and legends of
Similar to James Harden, Jaja and Kambili made personal journeys throughout the book. Jaja and Kambili experience denial, realization, and change, Similar to Plato’s allegory of the cave. Jaja and
In this article, Yesilbas, Trendacosta, and Newitz, list thirteen examples of Armageddon stories that teach lessons about the real world and its end. One example they examine is Logan’s Run. This book depicts survivors of war, overpopulation, and pollution living in a city sealed off from the forgotten world. However, life and death are controlled by a computer and when a person turns 30 they are disintegrated and reborn. If you choose not to die, you will be referred to as a “runner”, a criminal hunted down and murdered by the police.
The first two chapters, “A Darkling Plain” and “Prelude to Dust” explain human dislocation that developed from this drought. The next two parts, lets readers view the harsh conditions. Survivors of this crisis give the reader their perspective of the storm and how it tore down their community. The story then goes on to describe how humans misuse of these plains resulted in the “black blizzards,” that destroyed farms, homes, and top soil.
Though realism is expected in a non-fictitious book, the lack of filters Villaseñor does for this book enhances its given experience to a reader. Villaseñor was not afraid of putting his thoughts in the book, and this lack of faith resulted in an inspirational piece of
Inconclusive endings can allow the reader to expand their mind beyond the story, and imagine their own ending. The Poisonwood Bible, written by Barbara Kingsolver, is a novel following a missionary family in the Congo, and each chapter is written from a different member of the family’s perspective. The ending provides the reader with multiple ways to interpret the ending. One ending is more satisfactory than the other because everything comes full circle. One of Orleana’s children, Ruth May, dies tragically in Africa after surviving a terrible illness.
Life as we know it has ended in this thrilling book, “After the Red Rain”. Wars, pollution, and other unnamed disasters have blocked the sun, because of this, our planet is dying. There are no natural forms of plant or animal life, excluding humans, left on the planet and as a result, we are destined for extinction. Our heroine, Deedra is doing the best she can to survive in this new and terrifying world. Having been born in this dark time, she doesn’t know that life could be any better.
The old tracks clicked in the night, a soft hum of noise in an otherwise empty space. A smiling cartoon figure watched over it all, its eerie smile sticking out like a sore thumb in the somber mood the night had cast over the park. Long shadows were casted on the sidewalk, which were colored with spilled ice cream and leftover popcorn. A janitor swept them up absent-mindedly, his crisp whistle echoing around the still air. His back was to the castle, the pride and joy of the happiest place on earth.
When reading the short story, the first symbol the reader acknowledges is the title and how it is used to draw the setting. “Greasy Lake” gives us the vibe of how “it may be a party site, but it is associated with decay and destruction” (Grace 3). As Dominick Grace states, “the title “Greasy Lake” gives Boyle the chance to create an unpredictable atmosphere” (3). By creating an unpredictable setting, the reader is able to predict what consequences are to come as the narrator and his friends go on their “bad” adventure. Boyle makes the story more realistic when the events become more dangerous.
BMU Final Essay "In optimism there is magic. In pessimism there is nothing."-Abraham Hicks Godly fish, enigmatic witches, and ancient angels make up the magical realm that lives harmoniously in reality. At least it appears so in the extraordinary works of Rodolfo Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez's “A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings”, where the supernatural conduct daily business in all normal aspects. Anaya surrounds his main character Tony with an infinite amount of confusion over his fate, with the additions of influential witches and a pagan fish god.
Years passed, and the Gods did nothing. Crimes worsened, and death became imminent. Hope slipped from many's grasps, and belief left entirely for others. In mere seconds, our futures reduced to
In the memoir, “A Long Way Gone,” by Ishmael Beah, the author’s natural imagery reveals his struggle to keep hope alive as he watches his family and country fall apart. Specifically, after walking two straight days without sleeping, Beah claims that, “Even the air seemed to want to attack me and break my neck” (49). Obviously, Beah is beginning to feel as if everything is out to hurt him, as violence is spreading all across his homeland of Sierra Leone. Nature is usually meant to be welcoming, but as Beah is struggling to survive day to day and find food in constant fear of the Rebels, even something like wind can start to feel hostile. Additionally, on the third day of wandering in search of a village, in a forest so thick the sky is barely
I. Intro: We surveyed most of you, asking what first came to mind about the city of Paris. The most common given responses were: the Eiffel Tower, romance, and light. While these things may be true, there is a darker secret hiding under the “City of Light”; the empire of the dead. We plan to put Paris into your nightmares rather than your dreams with the history of the Catacombs, scary myths and legends about the underground labyrinth, and the extent of its existence today.
Matthew Lewis’ The Monk and Ann Radcliffe’s The Italian are two of the most iconic Gothic novels of the Eighteenth Century, both written only a year apart and one in response to other. It is of no surprise that both novels have various subjects in common—one of these, the Supernatural. Ghostlike forces, specters, demons and locations are approached differently in The Monk and The Italian, one uses the supernatural deliberately—and in a much larger role—while the other uses the supernatural to heighten certain scenes of terror. Certainly, both novels use it as a shock factor, but furthermore both use it for different reasons in their novels.
Napoleon Bonaparte created permanent, lasting change in the political landscape of Europe, elevating the ideals of liberalism and nationalism as his armies rolled across the continent, decapitating kingdoms and nation states, and winding them around the spindle of French empire and political thought. Though his empire collapsed fewer than two decades after its inception, and though France lost control of her American colonies by war or bargain, his impact was nonetheless colossal. More than anyone else Napoleon brought the ideals and goals of the revolution to fruition, not just in France but on the rest of the Continent as well. A true child of the revolution, Napoleon’s character was complex and fractured as any other. As a general he sought