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» Book Reports Essays and Papers
Flowers For Algernon 3
<view this essay>.... Charlie.
If Alice Kinnian, Charlie’s teacher before his surgery, had been telling the story, she would probably have noted the changes in Charlie’s personality as he got more intelligent, and also talked about how she was falling in love with him. She probably would said how she felt distant from Charlie after he became smarter than her. As Charlie began to regress, she might have written how she had mixed feelings; she was sad that Charlie was becoming retarded again, but at the same time wanted to have Charlie at her own level again, even if for only a short time.
If the people from the bakery had been telling Flowers For Algernon, then they .....
Number of words: 326 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Stephen King: Telekinesis And It’s Effects On The Innocent
<view this essay>.... and destruction. Mothers and maternal figures are often means of destruction. In Carrie’s case it is her mother, Margaret White, that aids in the total breakdown of Carrie’s mental unstableness.
Her first and greatest impediment to a normal life is
her mother, a woman indoctrinated with a fierce religious
fanaticism who refuses to teach Carrie the adjustment
skills necessary for survival in the real world.
Consequently, Carrie’s discovery of her menstrual
period- the initial event associated with the emergence
into womanhood- brings her only fear and loathing
( Magistrale 336 ).
One of Carrie White’s biggest and greatest downfalls in her .....
Number of words: 1384 | Number of pages: 6 |
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Zinn's A People's History Of The United States: The Oppressed
<view this essay>.... that most books neglect or skim over: the
plight of the Native Americans that had their numbers reduced by up to 90% by
European invasion, the equality of these peoples in many regards to their
European counterparts, the importation of slaves into America and their
unspeakable travel conditions and treatment, the callous buildup of the
agricultural economy around these slaves, the discontented colonists whose
plight was ignored by the ruling bourgeoisie, and most importantly, the rising
class and racial struggles in America that Zinn correctly credits as being the
root of many of the problems that we as a nation have today. It is refreshing to
see a book th .....
Number of words: 2109 | Number of pages: 8 |
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Raptor Red
<view this essay>.... forests, muddy salt flats, sandy beaches, and dry temperate
valleys. These
settings are all very vital to the book because it creates the prehistoric
atmosphere and
brutal planet these giants once inhabited. One of the key elements to the
book to make it
more realistic is how the author describes in detail all the other animals
that Raptor Red
hunts and runs into in the book. The author puts great detail in how Raptor
Red stalks her
prey and kills her victims. Once you start reading this book and you see how
intelligent
raptors once were you really can't decipher Raptor Red's thinking to a modern
day
human hunter.
3. This book foll .....
Number of words: 993 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Friendship In Mary Shelleys Fr
<view this essay>.... None of these characters desire to be isolated and when any of them become so, they lose the ability to function properly and are driven insane.
Whenever Victor suffers tragedy, he looks to the close comfort of his friends to raise his spirits. Following the creation of the monster, Victor undergoes great pain when he states, “I passed the night wretchedly”(p.87). In the process of creating the monster, Victor has been isolated for a long time. He becomes mad and sickened after the monster’s awakening and has never felt true horror and fear such as this. With the arrival of Clerval his emotions change when he states, “But I w .....
Number of words: 1135 | Number of pages: 5 |
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The Handmaid's Tale
<view this essay>.... today.
In the novel, men abuse their power in order to satisfy their personal needs. One mastermind of the Gileadean Era perfects his control over Offred with each secret visit. As a handmaid, with the added responsibility of being a companion, she learns of her inevitable servitude towards her Commander from an old friend.
"He's my Commander", I say.
She nods. "Some of them do that, they get a kick out of
it. It's like screwing on the altar or something: your
gang are supposed to be such chaste vessels. They like
to see you all painted up. Just another crummy power trip."
- page 228
The Commander's Wife also takes advantage of the power she .....
Number of words: 1764 | Number of pages: 7 |
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Beowulf 6
<view this essay>.... the characters. Beowulf is depicted as a superhero. Beowulf takes it upon himself to save the Danes from Grendel. In his battle with Grendel, Beowulf chooses not to use weapons; he relies on his strength. During the fight, Beowulf's strength takes over and Beowulf wrestles with Grendel until he is able to rip one of the monster's arms out of its socket. Superhuman feats also appear in the fight with Grendel's mother. When Beowulf enters the water, he swims downward for an entire day before he sees the bottom. He does this without the use of oxygen. During the battle with Grendel's mother, Beowulf realizes that Unferth's sword is useless against the monsters thi .....
Number of words: 802 | Number of pages: 3 |
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The Lottery: A Book Report
<view this essay>.... Hutchinson's cry, "It isn't fair." The resulting feelings of anger reproduce the common feeling of anger at oneself and the patient when one comes upon an unforeseen diagnosis, evolution, or outcome. The dynamics of scapegoating are highly relevant to medical practice, medical school, and the medical profession, where patients, students, colleagues and the profession itself can become scapegoats for the broader collective. They are also important in interactions with the identified patient's family and in family therapy (see family therapy texts).
The cross-cultural and transcultural nature of scapegoating is explored in Sir James Frazer's "The Golden Bough" .....
Number of words: 321 | Number of pages: 2 |
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