Category: Book Review
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Understanding Paulina’s Mentality: a Close Reading of Death and The Maiden, Act 2 Scene 1 Onwards
Significant dialogue from Act 2 of Death and the Maiden reveals how Paulina’s torture in the Chile’s past totalitarian regime has affected her life in the democratic present day. The ambiguity in the meaning of justice is a key theme that is significantly developed because the audience is exposed to two contradicting views from Paulina…
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War in Hesse’s Demian
In Demian, Herman Hesse discusses the meaning behind an apparently futile war under the guise of one boy’s search for personal identity. While Hesse spends much of the novel illustrating Emil Sinclair’s search for meaning, the tying in of the Great War at the end of the novel is neither surprising nor unnecessary. In fact,…
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Margaret Craven’s Portrayal of The Gap in Social Behavior as Described in Her Book, I Heard The Owl Call My Name
As the history of the world continues, gaps between the generations of all nationalities will continue to be made. We get a first hand example of this everyday, right here in the U.S. In today’s society, it is very difficult to find a child that shares the same interests as their parents. Whether it is…
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Analysis of Julie Orringer Book, Note to Sixth-grade Self
The narrator of “Note to Sixth-Grade Self” gains confidence and strength during the course of her story. The narrator is consistently bullied by Patricia and Cara, the popular girls at school. They turn the entire school against the narrator, leaving her to fend and stick up for herself. She is constantly put in the vulnerable…
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Family Dynamics in “Dinner at The Homesick Restaurant”
Anne Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant is filled with many complex characters that make up the Tull family. However, throughout the interconnected lives of siblings Ezra, Cody, and Jenny, the one key figure they lack is their father, Beck. In Anne Tyler novel, Beck’s characteristics ultimately lead to a disjointed family unit. The eldest…
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Kevin Land’s “Landless Land”
The four words Kevin Land’s Landless Land can illustrate should be emotionally, firmly and unbeaten. The main character accompanied by travel reading is Allan Hayward, a second officer of the Newfoundland Regiment. Along with him was Clarke, who was his closest friend, and the youngest in the war, Martin was always quick. Along with a…
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History of Gender Roles Presented by Samuel Pepys’s Diary
Samuel Pepys’s Diary is often studied for its first-hand account of important events in London’s history. Pepys records information on the Restoration of the Stuart Monarchy, the Plague, and the Great Fire of London, and readers are able to gain a greater understanding of this tumultuous time period through his writing. The Diary, in addition…
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Wendell Berry’s Views on The Concept of Food Consumption as Depicted in His Book “What Are People For”
Wendell Berry, ‘The Pleasures of Eating’ In his book, What are People For?, Wendell Berry presents some interesting ideas about food, agriculture, and consumers. He starts off by proposing that “eating is an agricultural act” and that with should be done with pleasure. Berry suggests that most consumers have no clue where the food came…
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Pictures Are Used to Descibe Time,circumstance and Events that Affect Immigrants
In the book The Emigrants by W.G. Sebald, the lexical words of the author are in perfect harmony with the visual pictures he presents to the reader; the illustrations are often matched concretely with the words, and they both simultaneously capture and escape the stillness of the past. Sebald uses the black-and-white images to illustrate…
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Racism in Walk Well, My Brother, Lark Song, and Cowboys and Indians
Is an author’s main purpose of writing only to entertain his readers? Authors sometimes use their literature to demonstrate their opinions about a certain issue. One of these topics may be racial and ethnic discrimination. We see how authors express their views about racism through the literatures “Walk Well, My Brother”, “Lark Song”, and “Cowboys…