Tangerine Constructed Response In the book “Tangerine” the main character, Paul Fisher, shares many differences and similarities to his mother, Mrs. Fisher. They sometimes show a different way of looking at things and they, at times, share the same reaction. An example of a difference would be, “Today she said, “Look at the mailbox on that Tudor. That’s not a Tudor-style mailbox.”
Have you ever wondered how an older brother feels about the younger one? For example, in Tangerine, a novel by Edward Bloor, the main character Paul, had feared his older brother, Erik, for his entire life. In the book, Erik is described as a selfish character that didn’t care for Paul in the very least. Just the opposite, Erik often likes to make choices that would make Paul feel bad. Erik’s choices have caused Paul to be blind, made him think himself as a coward, and weakened the friendships between Paul and Joey.
Everyone needs help in their life at some point in time. A person who helps another out is a mentor. A mentor tries to do all they can to help others out. In Edward Bloor’s novel Tangerine, Luis Cruz is the mentor because he gives advice, aids, and is a positive figure towards Paul. First, being the mentor, gives advice to Paul.
“I remember the fear in his eyes. I know that fear. It’s my fear” (Bloor, 76). Edward Bloor’s novel, Tangerine, is about how Paul’s life has become a personal horror show, thanks to his older brother, Erik. The twisted antagonist upsets Paul by causing him to live in constant fear, making his friends start to exclude him, and hurt his confidence so he won’t stand up for himself.
Tangerine is a book about action, trust, favoritism, and secrets. The main character is a boy named Paul Fisher. Paul is a middle schooler in Tangerine County, Florida, and has a older brother named Erik Fisher. Paul has a hard time remembering what caused him to be legally blind. He is tired of everyone thinking that his brother Eric, is a kind, innocent gentlemen, and not the mean bully
Erik’s father was so into the “Erik fisher football dream” that he did not realize that Erik is the reason that Paul is halfway blind. Erik thought that Paul told on his friend and he got in trouble “ You’re going to have to pay for telling on Castor. You told who sprayed paint on the wall, and Castor got into trouble. Castor doesn’t like getting into trouble….. And I remember Erik’s fingers prying my eyelids open while Vincent Castor sprayed white paint into them.”
Intriguing, inventive, and unusual are some words to describe the novel Tangerine by Edward Bloor. This novel is about protagonist, Paul Fisher, who just moved from Houston, Texas, to Tangerine County Florida where he has to deal with natural disasters striking everyday. On top of that he has to withstand his dissolute brother, Erik Fisher, the antagonist at home. He also needs to endure the favoritism portrayed by his father towards Erik and his football dream. In this novel we find out how Paul Fisher last living in this irregular neighborhood.
In a GCA, each character has different personalities, traits, and attributes that are distinguished through different shapes, sizes, and colors. Each of the characters develop different relationships with each other, that help tell the story, which are shown through lines, arrows, and squiggles. The characters are the most important elements in a narrative story, and their relationships can help tell the story without directly saying it. In this GCA, Paul Fisher, Erik Fisher, and Luis Cruz were described as a blue-violet heptagon, a dark red pow, and a light green cloud, to symbolize the essence of each of these characters in Edward Bloor’s book, Tangerine.
Frederic’s main internal conflict within himself was how to distance himself from the horrors of war. In this quote Frederic was being psychologically tortured, as he was forced to witness men being executed. Frederic was in a no win situation. If he stayed he was likely to be shot; if he ran he was likely to be shot. He was tired of the mind games he had to endure.
Imagine moving away from home, changing schools, and having a family that won’t even give attention when needed. Paul goes through all of this, and he is left to make decisions that will change his life forever. Three choices Paul goes through are, changing schools, tattling on Tangerine Middle School soccer players, and informing the police about Arthur and Erik’s wrong doings. In the novel, Tangerine by Edward Bloor, Paul moves from Houston Texas to Tangerine Florida, and the first five months are filled with decisions and chaos. The choices made by Paul, and the consequences of those choices, affect the development of his character.
Tangerine: it’s not only a citrus fruit, but a county in Florida, a middle school, and the title of an amazing book: Tangerine, written by Edward Bloor. The protagonist Paul Fisher “Eclipse Boy” or “Mars” has to fight through being kicked off the soccer team for being visually impaired, being bullied in school and not only in school, but by the antagonist, his dissolute brother Erik Fisher. He also has to constantly hear about how opinionated his dad is about his brother Erik and the “Erik Fisher Football Dream. In the beginning of the novel the readers can sense character traits that are different between Erik Fisher and Paul Fisher.
“No fear, Mom. Show them no fear.” (page 296). In the novel, Tangerine, by Edward Bloor, the protagonist, Paul Fisher, is going through many changes in his life after moving from Texas to Florida. Those changes include external ones, his friends and the environment around him, and internal ones, his views and opinions.
In the play Raisin in the Sun written by Lorraine Hansberry takes place on the southside of Chicago where Walter and his family are racially profiled and show us how the survive throughout their struggles. The central struggles for the younger family in their search for the American dream is mostly poverty and being racially profiled against for their actions. Hansberry challenges the traditional gender roles and issues of dominance throughout the play when Mama gives Walter lee the rest of the money at the end of the play. He becomes all excited and was supposed to save some for himself and put the rest of the money to Beneatha 's education. Instead, he gave all that money to Willy another character in the play which later on that he stole from him.
In “A Bag of Oranges” Nikos’ changes from an imaginative little boy to a responsible one, who has to grow up and carry the responsibilities of the family. In the marketplace, Nikos sees it as a magical new place that he wants to explore, where his father is very determined to get what the family needs. “The market was like a magic farm indomitably growing and prospering in the heart of the rotting slum” (216). Therefore, Niko’s still seeing the world through the eyes of an innocent child and not worrying about responsibilities that his father faces. On the bus when the bag of oranges spills open and the fruit falls into the aisle and Nikos’ father, Stavro, goes on his hands and knees to retrieve the oranges, this causes Nikos to become embarrassed.
Before his reign, King John proved many times to be unfit for the responsibility of a monarch. He was the youngest child of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitane, as well the brother of Richard the Lion-Hearted. Born into power, he received control over Ireland as a young boy. However, his poor leadership and management skills eventually lead to a failing reign. Not only offending the nobility with his brash and arrogant personality, he lost areas of Ireland due to his ineptitude for both political and military decisions.