Lucas Hahn Mr. Rodriguez Academic Lit. 15 June, 2023 The Cellar Analysis Throughout Lucas Hahn's short story The Cellar, the author explores the limits of human endurance both mentally and physically. The author portrays the mental limits of humans when we look at the character Ryan. Ryan at the beginning of the story was just a normal teenager, but at the end of the book he turned into a murderer. Through the book Ryan’s mental limits were tested like when they first got trapped in the cellar and they had no hope of getting out, or when he had been in the cellar for days starved,thirsty, and suffering from hypothermia. Presented with the opportunity of freedom. “the man whispered. ‘I need you to kill Dylan. It will save not only you and your friends a world of trouble, but also me because if I’m being honest I’m on thin ice right now. Get that done I’ll be back in 3 …show more content…
He heard a sound and quickly dropped the knife. When he looked over he saw a mortified Olivia and Faith. ‘What did you do?!’ Faith shouted. Ryan looked down at his hands now covered with blood,” (Hahn 10,11). The author shows that being in horrible living conditions for days tested Ryan’s mental endurance all the way to the point that he willingly killed Dylan without even putting much thought into it; he just did it subconsciously. Secondly The author explores the physical endurance of humans with the harsh conditions and the lack of food and water in the Cellar. Dylan’s limitations were tested straight away when he found out all the food and drinks he had placed down in the cellar had been reduced to crums. As a result of lack of food and drinks, gluttony plagued Dylan’s mind causing him to eat all of the remaining food they had left. As a result in the coming days the rest of the group would spend their time sleeping because not only were they suffering from lack of food and hydration but they were also suffering from
The title of my book is Lost in the Barrens. It is a fiction book by Farley Mowat that contains 244 pages. The Main Characters are Awasin, Jamie Angus, Alphonse, Denikazi and peetyuk. Awasin is a quite serious and he knows about how to survive in the wilderness and thinks more before he acts. Awasin is good at weaving, making clothing and hunting.
“The Glass Castle” is a biography, drama written by Destin Daniel Cretton; it portrays a young girl (Jeanette Walls) and her family as they struggle in poverty stricken towns with a mother who is an eccentric artist and her alcoholic father who she blindly puts her faith in. The film was released on August 11, 2017 and features Brie Larson, Woody Harrelson, and Naomi Watts among others. The big question, “What do I think about “The Glass Castle” film? The film was dissatisfying overall, I did not feel same emotional attachment that I felt with the book. They did not show enough of Jeanette and Rex’s connection to each other.
Have you ever thought about how difficult it might be to go into a different country knowing absolutely nothing, not even language, and something horrific happened to you or anyone in your family? Don’t you think you would feel so powerless, so helpless, so clueless? This happens commonly and it has never had any attention brought to it, at least not until 1998. Anne Fadiman wrote a book entitled, The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down. This demonstrated a collision of two complete opposite cultures, but they both have the same goal to help the child get better.
In this report we will be talking about the novel Hatchet, written by Gary Paulsen. All throughout the novel, Paulsen uses creative literary techniques to emphasise the theme of man versus nature. The novel, Hatchet, is about a young boy, called Brian, who takes a plane over a forest going from America to Canada to visit his dad, when the pilot dies from a heart attack and Brian has to crash land the plane in a lake. Brian then has to learn how to live in the wild while waiting to be found by the rescue crews. In the paragraphs below we will be talking about the literary techniques Paulsen uses throughout the novel, like metaphors, similes, reptation and exaggeration, that help show that, Brian is dealing with dangerous animals of the wild,
Morgan Newton Debbie Kincaid English 12 8 February 2023 Into The Wilderness Into The Wild written by Jon Krakuer in 1997, sheds light on the true story of a twenty four year old man. Christopher McCandless’ 113 day odyssey, which was cut short by a fatal mistake. McCandless’ journey took place in 1992, and his body was discovered after spending approximately four months in the bush. Christopher Mccandless’ journey or even life was full of chance and bad luck, but unfortunately during his odyssey his bad luck outweighed his luck.
Lyniya Davis Mrs. Juhas and Mrs. Mitchell 3rd and 5th 2/10/23 Title: Monstrous People Jared Harris- The scariest monsters are human beings and what we will do to each other. Steve Harmon is a 16 year old boy, who grew up in a bad and harsh environment named Harlem.
The Anonymous Bomber Abstract 2 It is May 25, 1978, you are at the university of Illinois A package is delivered in a brown paper bag it explodes, injuring the professor it is addressed to. Two more of these bombings occurred that year. On June 3, 1980, percy woods the president of united airlines recived a hollowed out book called The Ice Brothers.
The spirit catches you and you fall down: A Hmong child, her American doctors, and the collision of two cultures by Anne Fadiman illuminates the dilemmas, as well as barriers, persons of various cultural backgrounds can encounter daily, specifically when residing in a foreign habitation of different practices, perspectives and beliefs. This book highlights the difficulties one family must face during a clash between Hmong family cultural beliefs and western medicine. Fadiman (1997) brings our attention to these harsh realties that one can encounter when persons are unintentionally culturally incompetent through sharing the story of the Lia Lee and her parents, Nao Kao and Foua, who look for guidance from western doctors to assist their spiritual
The term “melting pot” has been used since the early 1900s, and it means a place where people, ideas, theories, cultures, etc. are mixed together. Although this may seem like a harmless thing, the idea that one must give up part of their culture to obtain parts of a new one undermines the importance of cultures in one’s life. In chapter 14 “The Melting Pot” of The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, Anne Fadiman shows the challenges and hardships that Hmong immigrants faced when immigrating to America to show the power that an environment has on a person’s connection to their culture, and the impact that people have on the culture of the society they are entering Fadamin provides examples of the action of Americans towards to Hmong people
Liking a serial killer is generally frowned upon, but in the novel Darkly Dreaming Dexter by Jeff Lindsay, he makes us like one. Jeff Lindsay makes the audience like Dexter, but as the book continues the view of him decays to a point of concern and pity. This view towards him continues until the affection towards him is reinforced as he chooses to remain human. Lindsay uses this type of protagonist to convey ideas of society, like not knowing who someone truly is, and showing that heroes do not always do the right thing, until it matters most. Some readers can see this in Dexter through ought the book as he conceals his identity.
Anne Fadiman’s novel The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, documents the life of the Lees, Hmong refugees who live in California. Their daughter Lia has a seizure which they diagnosed as qaug dab peg, “the spirit catches you and you fall down”. These seizure cause her to become vegetated for the rest of her life. Her parents believed that her seizures happened because her soul had fled her body.
I selected the novel All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr because in the summary the novel is said to tell the story of a blind girl and—having read once before a novel from the perspective of a blind girl—was intrigued to see the author’s take on it. The story begins in Saint Malo, France 1944 in the midst of WWII. It then bounces back 10 years to 1934 and with brief excerpts from the starting point tells the tale of how the narrators reached their predicaments. The two main narrators are Marie-Laure, a sixteen-year-old blind French girl, and Werner a sixteen-year-old German boy who excels with radios. There are also five other narrators that are not constant but provide context as to how main events occur.
In the memoir The Glass Castle, journalist Jannette Walls tells the bittersweet story of her childhood struggles and what it was like growing up in poverty. “I lived in a world that at any moment could erupt into fire. It was the sort of knowledge that kept you on your toes.” (pg.34) Walls grows up in a family trailed by broken homes, and she focuses on her untraditional childhood with her parents that were too self-centered and lazy to have steady jobs.
Also, coping mechanisms had life changing effects on Lt. Jimmy Cross, Bob “Rat” Kiley, and Tim O’Brien (The Narrator) and they were either saved or it led to their destruction. To understand how coping mechanisms work a person must have to be in a stressful problem.
The First Decision Reef, the main character in the novel, The First Stone, by Don Aker, makes a bad decision and ultimately has to deal with the consequences. To begin, Reef latches his anger onto a stone and deliberately throws it over an overpass into oncoming traffic. The stone causes a major accident between not one, but several cars and severely injures a teenage girl. Fortunately for Reef, the Judge sentences him to live at North Hills Group Home, and to volunteer at a rehabilitation centre. This punishment changes Reef’s life for the better.