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» Book Reports Essays and Papers
Mildred Taylor's "Roll Of Thunder Hear My Cry": Hardships Of The Logan Family
<view this essay>.... brothers. The
book mainly revolves around Cassie and the events that happen to her family.
These events make Cassie a much stronger person and help her to understand that
having land of their own is her family's source of pride and strength.
Cassie also found herself coming to conclusions about everyday life for
a black person and their family living in Mississippi. The land, the 400 acres
of land her family owned, was more important than anything. It was what kept
Logans together.It gave them their livelihood and their courage, and nothing,
not even Mr.Granger, could take it away from them. Or could he? With this land,
the Logans possessed somethin .....
Number of words: 283 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Fahrenheit 451
<view this essay>.... the novel Montag goes through a transformation, where he changes from a Conformist to a Revolutionary. Guy Montag has never questioned his job before the day he met Clarisse McClellan. This is the first time where Montag is confronted with the idea that, he doesn’t understand the whole truth about books. Montag meets Clarisse as he is one day walking home from work, and they strike up a conversation. During their conversation Montag is questioned why books are illegal and why firemen burn the books. She also asks him if he had ever read any of the books that he burned. His reply was that it is against the law. Clarisse even asks, "… long .....
Number of words: 1120 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Grapes Of Wrath Book Report
<view this essay>.... every step of the way. The
Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck, is the story about a family living during the days of
the depression and what they did to survive. Many families were hurt by the depression,
so Steinbeck wrote of a typical family with detail that makes you understand the pain and
suffering people went through in the country’s darkest of times.
Tom Joad, recently released from prison for a homicide, hitchhikes back home to
his fathers farm which he hasn’t been to in 4 years. He tells the truck driver who gives
him a ride that he got in a fight with a guy at a dance and when he tried to brandish a
knife, Tom hit him on the head with a shov .....
Number of words: 1494 | Number of pages: 6 |
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My Antonia
<view this essay>.... these emotions in the reader is through the ongoing theme of inevitable destiny and separation.
Cather sets the tone of the story at the very beginning, a young Jim Burden's parents have died leaving him to go to Nebraska to live with his grandparents. Right from the start Cather plants the seeds of abandonment, with the finality of death, in Jim's life. When he arrives in Nebraska he is very numb to life, but he is soon caught up in daily life on his grandparents farm. He is blissfully happy when he first meets Antonia. They become great friends and share numerous adventures.
Cather uses brief, beautifully descriptive and nostalgic recollections of situa .....
Number of words: 899 | Number of pages: 4 |
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A Critical Approach To "Barn Burning" (by William Faulkner)
<view this essay>.... and his family.
The economic status of the main characters is poor, without hope of
improving their condition, and at the mercy of a quasi-feudal system in
North America during the late 1800's. Being a sharecropper, Ab and his
family had to share half or two-thirds of the harvest with the landowner
and out of their share pay for the necessities of life. As a result of
this status, Ab and his family know from the start what the future will
hold -- hard work for their landlord and mere survival for them.
No hope for advancement prevails throughout the story. Sarty, his
brother and the twin sisters have no access to education, as they must
spend their time .....
Number of words: 808 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Notes From The Underground: Underground Man
<view this essay>.... the same time make rational decisions. In this piece you understand how the Underground Man feels about society and why he thinks people make the choices they do. His thoughts begin to make sense and he expresses many reasonable ideas, which is a big development in the character.
The Underground Man seems to be very sarcastic when talking about why people do bad things. If everyone were enlightened and knew their real normal interests then they would become noble and good. His only advantage would be in the good. The only reason he does bad things is because he does not know his own interests. The Underground Man does not really believe that though. He .....
Number of words: 901 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Book Review On Grapes Of Wrath
<view this essay>.... by casting away the methods of the past and being able to endure the misfortunes that life throws at them. Of course their progress is hampered by an unreliable truck and by the “quest for the dollar” that all migrants had. Through their journey to find work and settle down, the Joad’s encounter many calamities that test their relationship as a family and their own limits as individuals. As in real life, not everyone succeeds with his or her goals, and this story of hardship is no different.
In the beginning of the book we get an early look at Steinbeck’s ideals when Muley Graves says,“…if a fella’s got somepin to .....
Number of words: 557 | Number of pages: 3 |
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1984
<view this essay>.... begins in London on April 4, 1984 after an atomic world
war divides the world into three states. London is the capital of Oceania
which is run by INGSOC(English Socialism). The controllers are called "The
Party." The Party is divided into two sections, The Inner Party, and The
Outer Party which are the "Rich" and the "middle-class." There is a third
group of people called "The Proles," or "The Proletariat" which are the
poor, and considered to be animals by the party. The main leader of this
government is Big Brother. The novel is told in third person and partly
first person, and is also divided into three parts. In the first part the
main character and hi .....
Number of words: 1030 | Number of pages: 4 |
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