Throughout our everyday life we compare everything; we see how all kinds of things are similar and different, whether it's with cats and dogs, or wolves and people. A huge part of when we compare and contrast is when we are reading. The stories, “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, “The Interlopers”, and “The Wife’s Story” all have similarities with each other but also they have many differences that make the stories come down to a lesson you will learn. The three stories of , “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, “The Interlopers”, and “The Wife’s Story” are more different than they are alike. In particular, the characters from the 3 stories are similar because each character did not get along with one or more characters. However the conflicts throughout all the three stories are extremely different because the main problems each character faces are tremendously different. Above all each of the …show more content…
To begin, with in the stories of, “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, “The Interlopers”, and “The Wife’s Story” we can see that the characters from each of these stories share many similarities, throughout the telling of their story, each of the characters did not get along with another character. For example we can see in the story of, “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” by Karen Russell that throughout the entire story there are 2 girls that the rest of the girls do not get along with. In paragraph 28 of the story it states, “ The pack hated Jeanette, but we hated Mirabella more. We began to avoid her…” (Russell 28). In this quote we can see that there were two girls singled out in the pack that the others disliked. In the story they did not like Jeanette because she was adapting too fast and no one could catch up, but they hated Mirabella