What Is The Theme Of Once More To The Lake By E. B White

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What is the definition of family? Is it people with common DNA that live together, or is it people who love each other? It is people who do not even know each other but suffer from the same pain. There are many ways to interpret the definition of family, but which is correct?

The reading “Once More to the Lake” characterizes the meaning of family by showing the relationship that occurs between a father and a son. When the writer, E. B. White, tells the readers his memory of a campground his father once brought his family to, it gives them an in-depth look into the people he cares about and the loving memories he made. Throughout “Once More to The Lake,” White tells the readers that he brought his son to that same campground as well, the reason …show more content…

In the speech that Amy Tan made called, “Mother Tongue,” she unmasks the years she spent being her mother's interpreter and learning different “Englishes'” to help her. Tan shared the struggle of being an American-born daughter of a Chinese-born mother, which helps the readers realize how similar situations happen all around the world. The bond of that struggle can bring offspring of immigrant parents together to help each other adapt and learn different “Englishes.” Although Amy Tan and her mother did have a few arguments, meaning she quite literally held a knife to her neck, they were able to get past their differences and continue sharing this unbroken …show more content…

This is a fun memory for Annie Dillard, the author of “From an American Childhood,” shares her eventful memory throwing snowballs. Dillard shows her experiences in having only boy friends, but also shows how bonding over their similarities and a shock of an exciting event can bring others together. In her memory, after throwing a snowball at a car and being chased by the owner, she looked back at that memory fondly and gave us a glimpse of how much she cared about those boys and how Dillard wishes she could go back and do it all again. Annie Dillard depicted family as those who bonded over an exhilarating