James Patterson’s book, Maximum Ride, is quite the journey. It is a sensational and conflicting story that definitely the reader intrigued. It is about six young kids who finally escaped from a lab where they were experimented on and were brought there after being kidnapped. The six kids are; Max, who has the leader role in the group, Fang, Iggy, Gasman, Angel and Nudge. They have grown up together and are on the mission to find their parents.
Matt Fowler, a man who cared about his children dearly, was the man who had to do the unspeakable, bury his own child. After his son was murdered in cold blood by the Richard Strout, the man whose Frank’s new lover was married too, we see how Fowler handles the brutal murder of his son. In the beginning Fowler reacts how any person would when it comes to the death of a friend or family member, mourning. He does nothing but sit around the house with his wife Ruth and cries, denying his friend’s plea to go drinking with them. Then he finally succumbs to the invitations when Ruth tells him to go out and take his mind off the situation.
“Dignity is as essential to human life as water, food, and oxygen. The stubborn retention of it, even in the face of extreme physical hardship, can hold a man 's soul in his body long past the point when the body should have surrendered it” (Hillenbrand 189). In the novel Unbroken, written by Laura Hillenbrand, Louis “Louie” Zamperini goes through several life-threatening experiences. After being a troublemaker as a child, and an Olympic athlete, Louie straps up his boots and becomes a bombardier for the Army Air Corps. After a traumatizing crash and a forty-six day survival at sea, Louie is taken captive by Japanese officials.
Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment by James Patterson is one of the best books I have ever read, and I would definitely give it a five out of five rating. Fourteen-year-old Maximum Ride (Max) is not your ordinary teenage girl, the girl can fly. Max and her winged “flock” are the results of experiments at a secret lab called “The School” to inject avian genes into human infants. The flock includes Fang (a dark-haired boy only 4 months younger than Max), Iggy (another 14-year-old who is blind due to an experiment gone wrong)
Christopher R. Browning’s Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and The Final Solution in Poland is seen as one of the most influential book in Holocaust studies. The book traces the Reserve Police Battalion (hereafter RPB-101), a single German unit, throughout their military duty. These soldiers were instructed to kill innocent Jewish men, woman and children in Poland. Most of the men in the RPB-101 were originally deemed not suitable of conscription. When massacres in history occur, it is in the nature of human beings to think of the culprits as being different from normal people; savages or villains that kill for pleasure or have no remorse.
Imagine getting up everyday before high school and preparing for war. For Melba Pattillo Beals this fear was a scary reality. In the beginning of “Warriors Don 't Cry: A Searing Memoir of the Battle to Integrate Little Rock 's Central High” by Melba Pattillo Beals, she begins talking about what it’s like to come back to the haunted racist halls of Little Rock Central High School. This was a time when civil rights was a major issue and the color separation between white and black was about to be broken. Melba and nine other students entered Central High School becoming the first African American students to go to an all white school.
If we were able to make our children smarter, better looking, or more athletic, should we? Amy Sterling Casil had that exact scenario in mind when she wrote her short story, Perfect Stranger in 2006. Written in the first-person narrative that takes place in the distant future, Casil weaves a terrifying story of genetic alteration to “fix” our children’s flaws. What harm can it cause if gene therapy is performed as an elective procedure rather than medical necessity? Gary and Carolyn, expecting parents, find out their little boy will need gene therapy while still in the womb if they hope to spare him from a fatal heart condition.
n the short story, “The End of the Whole Mess,” written by Stephen King, the protagonist, Howie, introduces the reader to himself and his family dynamic. Howie tells the story through his journal entries, where he recounts the life of him and his genius younger brother, Bobby. With the use of dry humor and irony, Howie is able to relay the whole series of events that erupted into an apocalypse.
Blink, a book written by Malcolm Gladwell where he explains the psychology of unconscious thinking. Gladwell tells his readers about how our subconscious mind affects a lot of our actions and behavior. In the book he brings up the idea of “thin slicing” in which a person uses little pieces of information about a person and uses that to form a larger opinion of the person. Further in the book he continues to say that most humans cannot explain how our subconscious mind works, he uses the example of Vic Braden a tennis coach who can predict when a tennis player is going to serve two bad serves in a row. When asked, Braden could not explain how he could predict such a thing and didn’t know how to explain this fact to others.
Plagiarism and the effects on the Creative Process In “Something Borrowed,” Malcolm Gladwell discusses what he describes are the problems of plagiarism. First, that plagiarism is based on ethical rules, that decided words are the property of the writer, and it is not acceptable to copy. His second problem states that there is a disconnection on what inhibits the creative process. Somehow it is acceptable to mimic another’s work, but using their work is wrong.
The Autobiography of Malcolm X by Alex Haley is about the life of Malcolm Little, an African American man who has impacted American history while also finding himself as an individual. Malcolm Little, now known as Malcolm X fought against discrimination, segregation and racism against the black community in the 20th century at the same time as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. However, like many he also went through many changes within himself as an individual and that allowed him to grow and change as a person. Three important transformations or ways he changed his self image were in prison, his transformation into the Islamic religion and his pilgrimage to Mecca.
In my opinion, the most important “Last Mile” issue is providing adequate healthcare to people in underdeveloped countries. The issue of healthcare is not new, and there are certainly people such as Paul Farmer and companies like BD that are working to combat this issue. From reading Paul Farmer’s book, I learned that patients often need very specialized attention and it can be hard to reach the “last mile” to help every person. When Dr. Farmer spent an entire day walking to one patient, he went above and beyond what most people would have done. Yet, when he went out of his way to provide aid to one person, he sacrificed helping many patients at his clinic.
The Rithmatist, by: Brandon Sanderson is an exceptionally, intriguing book about, well Rithmatists. Chosen by the Master in a mysterious inception ceremony, Rithmatists have the power to infuse life into two-dimensional figures known as Chalklings. The extremely well-developed characters in this book make it truly award-winning.
Isabelle Dunnam Mr. Hyde P4 English Honors 4/6/16 “The Longest Ride” By Nicholas Sparks SETTING Sophia attends Wake Forest University which is where many events take place. The university is a big part of the novel because Sophia is in a sorority and lives in the house on campus. She shares a room with Marcia in the sorority house at wake forest is often where Luke comes to pick up Sophia to take her on her dates. Ira lived in Greensboro, North Carolina all his life. Greensboro is also the city that Ruth moved after leaving Vienna with her parents.
In his article, “Thresholds of violence” by Malcolm Gladwell, has effectively proven that the school shootings changed and they’ve became ritualized. From an incident, a group of three officers had arrived to the unit’s door step, and a young man stood in the center. The man became extremely defensive when one of the officers had to pat LaDue down. The officer had over heard that LaDue was making bombs in the storage locker, then had found a SKS assault rifle with sixty rounds of ammunition, a Beretta 9-mm, hand gun, including three ready-made explosive devices hidden in his bedroom. “There are far more things out in that unit than meet the eye” (Gladwell 2), exampling how there’s not only going to be a specific amount of bombs that would have