Recommended: Essays on major character development
And I swear to you, Ashes I’d have the money in your hands by Friday. ’”P.4. That fact that Ashleigh’s dad swore to her that he’d pay her back by Friday, using her special nickname shows that he wishes he didn’t have to ask for a
District Common Assessment Essay “I lifted the lid and stared at her emergency money. ”-pg4. Ashleigh is a character in the short story “Ashes” by Susan Beth Pfeffer. In “Ashes”, Ashleigh is a teenager whose parents are divorced and complete opposites. Her father is a dreamer and not responsible while Ashleigh’s mother is always prepared and extremely responsible.
“Ashes” is a compelling story written by Susan Pfeffer tells about the relationship of father and daughter. Ashes’s parents are divorced, and Ashes’s dad takes her home every Tuesdays and Thursdays. She always feels better with her dad and likes being with him. But, he is also really irresponsible and breaks his fair share of promises. A lesson that this story suggests is that just because you have influence doesn’t mean you should abuse it.
In addition, it displays Ashes' biased opinion of thinking that the right thing to do was to steal the money for her dad because of how his love influences her. Besides, you can tell Ashes does not just love her dad the most because of the thoughts of loneliness and unright feelings she gets as she is about to steal the money for
They said that she want the money to buy herself a nicer home with other things she had wanted her whole life but her dad would not allow it (Berni, C. (1997). After he died she went a bought what she had
“My friends fathers, they just tell them to study more. They never tell them they have flair or style. ”(Pfeffer 2). This is a big reason for her taking the money.
Ashes Common Assessment Imagine being faced with the toughest choice of your life, choosing between your parents. Ashleigh, or Ashes, has been torn between her mother and father her entire life. Her mother, a logical women who bases her decisions on the facts, and her father, who is more of a people person and bases his decisions others. So when her father asked her to “borrow” $200 from her mother to pay off a loan, Ashes was faced with the toughest decision she could ever imagine.
Will Dobert Hour 2 District Common Assessment “In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing.” -Theodore Roosevelt. In the short story Ashes by Susan Beth Pfeffer, a girl named Ashleigh is being pressured by her dad to do the wrong thing; steal money from her mom’s emergency money stash. Ashleigh’s parents are split up and her dad is short on money.
Ashes are usually cold, grey, and dead to someone, however, this is a different story. Ashleigh, or Ashes, is a girl who’s parents are divorced. On a Tuesday night in the winter, Ashes and her father go out to a diner, and she realizes that her dad isn’t acting right. When she asks what’s wrong, her dad confesses that he owes 200 dollars to someone, and Ashes wants to know if she can help; her dad tells her that she can by taking Ashes’s mom’s emergency money. When they drove back the her mom’s house, Ashes decided to take the money because she had asked many questions about the topic, the way the parents were described, and how Ashes has a better relationship with her dad than with her mom.
A young girl, who killed her mother and wants to know more about her, changes the 14 year old’s life for a long period of time. In the novel, Lily has lived with some heavy burdens on her shoulders. She has to overcome these things and tell the truth even if she doesn’t want to. In Sue Monk Kidd’s novel, “The Secret Life of Bees,” Lily has a coming of age moment when she tells August the truth about everything. She decides to tell August the truth as shown through these things: telling her she is unlovable, how she was angry with what she heard, getting the items she has had.
the narrator doesn’t see the effect of her actions because when she is telling her dad that she will read the books he picks out for her and then doesn’t, this would hurt her dad. If she would just talk to him and tell him how his persistence is affecting her negatively, it would be better for both of them. Finally, they both don’t understand each other's opinions. the narrator’s dad doesn’t realize that she isn’t as excited as him about books and vocabulary words, and this is affecting by making her feel like their parent doesn’t understand her interests or opinions. She feels sad about this because this makes her miss her mom who did understand what she wanted to do.
Ashes feels that her father is “like a warm day in January” (Pfeffer 1), he's the kind of person to always be there at the right time and surprises you with happiness. Ashes father always tells her she is “One in a million”(Pfeffer 2) and to not “let anyone ever tell you otherwise”(Pfeffer 2) because he cares about and loves ashes even and believes that she too should engage in following her dreams even if she might not succeed, she might need the confidence. Ashes and her father get along better than her and her mother, she even goes as far as saying “I wouldn't have any other dad” because all of her friends dads “they just tell my friends to study more”, ashes is happy that she and her dad are like best friends and not just formal like her friends and their dads. Ashes believed in her dad and trust he will keep his promise. Ashes was influenced by her father, she and her mother never had a secure relationship and ashes believes in her father and his dreams, ashes stole the money from her mother's teapot.
Irenaeus simply wants to address the false teachings of the Gnostics by expounding upon the truths and mysteries of God. He wants to show the arguments of the Gnostics to be absurd and how far from the truth those teachings are. He does this by restating the tradition of the church and how this tradition was established. He then moves on to presenting an argument for apostolic succession.
Amy tans’ the joy luck club is picturing the relationship between mothers and their daughters born in America. The relationship is weaken by daughters’ disobedience, lack of communication, and even getting along with their mothers seems challenging. For examples, Waverly asked her mom “Ma, what is Chinese torture” because she couldn’t understand her mom expression of love toward her. This book is about how the mothers and daughters relationship can be weakened by the tragedy and daughters’ disobediences.
The realistic fiction story, “Ashes”, by Susan Beth Pfeffer is about a young girl who has two very polar opposite parents. A fun, but irresponsible father, and a practical, proactive mother. Ashes faces a major dilemma when her financially troubled father asks Ashes to steal from her mother’s emergency fund for his own personal needs. Sometimes, the people you love most can be selfish and deceive you. This relates to my story because Ashes’ dad is manipulative, deceptive, and selfish.