Susan is a Canadian writer of young adult literature. Her novel “Nice Recover” defines the thin line between the right and wrong of alcohol. The readers notice early in the novel that the novel is written in narrative style, and the timeline is not static. Although it primarily stays in the present, it skips to the past occasionally. From her present life, high school to flash backs of junior school. Nice recovery follows the story of a teenage girl named Susan. A biography written by Susan to describe ever situation she had experienced throughout her teenage years. The plot opens by Susan introducing herself and her pass. Susan would get bullied in junior school by individuals in her school, and she thought she was responsible of making a …show more content…
Susan got influenced by the wild ones and became addicted to drugs, alcohol, partying and having relationships. Susan became close friends with a girl name Darcy which was also a part of the wild ones. Susan was known as one of the popular girls, getting noticed by boys and having relationships. Susan had a rough time throughout her teenage years. she got addicted to alcohol and couldn’t live without it, she went to every party and embarrassed herself while she was drunk, this became her every day routine. As time passed by she noticed she wasn’t getting anywhere with the way she was, so she moved to Toronto and got accepted to college for fashion designing. Susan was not ready to enter the real world, her gurney did not last long until she got kicked out due to her low marks. Susan felt bad about being kicked out so she joined one class at University of Toronto for English, she also started to join community centers that helped her recover from being an alcoholic. She got better and better every day, attending meeting, school and …show more content…
She has a very strong ability of describing objects or situations in detailed to give the reader a visual image. Susan’s purpose of writing is to persuade young teens to not follow the crowd. She does this by explaining every little situation such as how hard her life was and how hard it was to quit alcohol. She felt like alcohol was her only way of relieving stress, anxiety and depressions. This was not true, she noticed being sober was better and that she had lots of more fun during that period. Susan wants people who think alcohol helps relieve pain and stress to change the way they think. And for people who think alcohol makes them seem cool or they do it to fit in are wrong, it is just a way of self-harm. She achieves this message of how wrong alcohol and drugs are by sharing her own
Crank is part one of three book installment written by Ellen Hopkins. In the beginning of the novel we meet Kristina a straight A, clean cut, 16 year old girl. But while visiting her drug addicted father during the summer before her junior year Kristina meets the “monster” and she also meets Bree, her dangerous alter ego, within no time Kristina lets Bree completely take over. Bree is Kristina’s chic, smooth-talking persona that has one major flaw… she has a serious craving for any and every drug.
For this assignment, I decided to read Dry by Augusten Burroughs. Augusten Burroughs, takes us on his journey as he describes his life and struggles as an alcoholic. Burroughs, divides his memoir into two parts. In the first part of his book, he explains how he goes from being one of the top advertisers in New York who later ends up in rehab. He also introduces his co-worker, friends and family and the relationship he has amongst them.
Have you ever tried to fit in for someone else? That is exactly why Susan Caraway did. The novel Stargirl is about a cheerful, free spirited girl. Her name is Susan, but she is referred to as Stargirl throughout the novel. Stargirl is sixteen years old, and has been homeschooled all her life.
Jeannette Walls is an amazing woman with an abnormal and noteworthy life. She has a lived in poverty most of her life. Living in poverty isn’t just struggling for meals and living on welfare for Jeannette. It is living in the desert being nomads, living in trailer parks, and living in termite and roach infested homes. If that isn’t enough she was sexually assaulted more than one, bullied, and her parents are delirious.
The Addiction That Differentiated Both Wes Moores When we reflect on our life, we create a metaphorical puzzle. These puzzle pieces represent all of the small decisions we made. Inside of those decisions, also consists of other people and how they influenced our upbringings. When this puzzle is put together, all of these decisions create one big picture.
Maggie on the other hand, is characterized by her unattractiveness and timidity. Her skin is scarred from the fire that had happened ten or twelve years ago. Those scars she has on her body in the same way have scarred her soul leaving her ashamed. She “stumbles” in her reading, but Mrs. Johnson loves her saying she is sweet and is the daughter she can sing songs at church with, but more so that Maggie is like an image of her. She honors her family’s heritage and culture, by learning how to quilt and do things in the household, like her mother views their heritage.
The voices of Indigenous children are unheard and purposely ignored. This is portrayed through the literature of Birdie by Tracey Lindberg and Indian Horse by Richard Wagamese. Despite both apologies from Stephen Harper and Justin Trudeau, the government system to protect First Nations children appears to have detrimental effects on the life of a child. This is proven by young children turning to drugs in order to satisfy their growing pain, family members who abuse their children because they consume high amounts of alcohol, which has a negative impact on the child, and discriminatory behaviour by surrounding communities. To begin with, young children turning to drugs in order to satisfy their growing pain.
For this assignment, I decided to read Dry by Augusten Burroughs. Augusten Burroughs, started off from being one of the best advertising suffers from alcoholisms and his book goes into great deal of his journey that eventually led to his recovery. Burroughs, divides his memoir into two parts. In the first part of his book, consists of four chapter. Here we read about how he goes from being one of the top advertisers in New York to later ending up in rehab.
Her book describes the hardship and struggle she faced growing up in Little Rock and what it was like to be hurt and abused all throughout high school.
Nathalie Diaz’s poems “How to Go to Dinner with a Brother on Drug” and “ My Brother at 3 A.M” point out how drug and alcohol abuse cause stress and problems over a family. Diaz explains the struggle that her family has to be through because of her brother addiction. Diaz’s poems show her life and the struggle she needs to experience such as drug addiction, violence, and poverty. The brother addiction to the Meth causes the family fall in part.
The voices of Indigenous children are unheard and purposely ignored. This is portrayed through the literature of Birdie by Tracey Lindberg and Indian Horse by Richard Wagamese. Despite receiving apologies from Prime Ministers Stephen Harper and Justin Trudeau, the government system to protect First Nations families appears to have detrimental effects on the native children. This is proven by young children turning to drugs in order to satisfy their growing pain, by family members who abuse their kids because of alcohol addictions, and the increasing discriminatory behaviour by surrounding communities. To begin with, young children are turning to drugs in order to satisfy their growing pain.
Karen Coats characterises the protagonists' behaviour in young-adult fiction as “the hyper-narcissi of judging others by own experiences, and an unreflective immersion in and advocacy for those things that please [them] in the moment” (319), which are all personality traits that Sutter exhibits. The story revolves around Sutter’s drinking problem and how it affects his relationships with the people who surround him, all for the sake of immersing himself in the ‘now’. In
The Glass Castle: Jeannette Walls- Responsibility Haileigh Williams Upon reading The Glass Castle, written by Jeannette Walls, the reader will quickly notice all of the responsibilities Jeannette; the author and narrator of the novel, takes on throughout her life. The book itself is a memoir of Jeannette’s life that takes place from 1963 to 2005 and takes the reader through the ups and downs of Jeannette’s life in poverty and somewhat neglect. While reading the novel, the reader will be shown situations where they will be shocked and heartbroken. Jeannette’s family isn’t the average family from the south.
Melinda was raped as a young girl heading into her first year of high school and what happened after that was a catastrophe and would change her life and her peers view of her. Melinda perpetually haunted by her treacherous past memories struggled to stay happy and sane throughout her overwhelming first year of high school. Melinda evolves over time as she longs to be her past happy self again she slowly but surely begins to regain her happiness and self-confidence. With life-changing events coming at Melinda every which way, she experiences the highs and the lows and finds little things in life like her extraordinary passion for art to help her get through the toughest times in her life. This story will make your heart melt with sorrow and compassion, but also bring to you a remarkable story with realistic like events and settings.
Speak Journal Response This journal is in response to the novel Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson. As a coming-of-age contemporary novel, Speak discusses many sensitive issues that are still prominent even today. In this story, we explore the life of Melinda Sordino, a fourteen-year-old girl who is beginning high school right after experiencing an utterly traumatic event: rape. Melinda is left friendless, with no one to help and support her after what happened.