Papers on Book Reports
Summary Of Aycliffe's The Lost
Words: 604 - Pages: 3.... an attractive sense of humor but, humor
fades as the creepy crawlies take over. A prep-school teacher in Cambridge,
Michael Feraru, inherits Castle Vliacu, his family's fortress in the
Transylvanian Alps and hopes to turn it into an orphanage for Romanian
children. Delightful letters pass between Michael and his love, Sophie
Wandless, back in Cambridge, as he describes his travels through Eastern
Europe, his frustrating encounters with bureaucrats, and the gloomy life in
today's Bucharest. Meanwhile, he hires a research assistant, Liliana, to
help him establish his bona fides as the owner of Castle Vliacu.. Liliana
and her secret boyfrie .....
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Sexuality In Wiseblood
Words: 1239 - Pages: 5.... quickly.
This first bout with sexuality was certainly a grotesque one, and one which, perhaps, helped fortify his resolve not to experiment with sex for years to come. Haze reacted to the incident on different levels. Before watching the "show," he was filled with curiosity. So badly he wanted to view this "EXclusive" show. After glancing at the body, he first thought that it was a skinned animal. When he realized what it was, he at once left the tent, ashamed, and perhaps frightened of the object before his eyes.
Hazel’s reaction was not unnatural. The sight with which he was confronted would invoke both fear and embarassment within mos .....
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Of Mice And Men: The Great Depression - The Uncommon Struggle Of All Men
Words: 729 - Pages: 3.... could find one,
you were very lucky and grateful.
My grandfather was the 11th of 12 children in his family and they
moved from Bridgeport, OK to "the city" of Edmond after the Depression hit
and he took any job he could find to help out with the monthly income and
payments. Many people did not cope with the dust bowl or the Depression
very well. The younger generation had to change its way of thinking. They
also had just changed the styles of everything in the 1920's (Roaring
20's!).
The styles had changed a lot from the 1920's. The younger
generation had to go out and find jobs...jobs such as carrying ice,
newspapers, .....
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Dolores Claiborne
Words: 517 - Pages: 2.... about the fact that it ever happened. In the movie, however, Salena has come back from New York to defend her mother after she has been accused of killing Vera Donovan. She has developed a drug abuse problem, just like her father. Salena is the reason for many of the scenes throughout the movie, as she is remembering them and discussing what really happened with her mother.
In both the novel and the movie, the story of the eclipse and the events leading up to it are told in a flashback. The difference is that in the novel, Dolores is telling her story to the police in the form of a confession. She wants to get it all out of her cons .....
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The Flamboyant Hester Prynne
Words: 684 - Pages: 3.... female types and recombining them artistically so that they become crucial elements of the rhetorical and artistic construct of his fiction (Reynolds 179). Hawthorne used ironies of fallen women and female criminals to achieve the perfect combination of different types of heroines. His heroines are equipped to expel wrongs against their sex bringing about an awareness of both the rights and wrongs of women. Hester is a compound of many popular stereotypes rich in the thoughts of the time ...portrayed as a fallen woman whose honest sinfulness is found preferable to the future corruption of the reverend (Reynolds 183). Hester was described .....
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What Makes Up A Work Of Literature
Words: 765 - Pages: 3.... wants revenge on Dimmesdale for corrupting
Hester. His thoughts are read by the reader, and his actions represent the
fiendish ways that have overcome him. The way he torment s Dimmesdale is
seen when he acts as his physician. Chillingworth knows that Dimmesdale
was the father of Pearl, Hester's daughter. But he wants to torment and
take revenge on the Reverend Dimmesdale, who suddenly became sick.
Chillingworth uses his knowledge of the human mind and of medicine to
deduce that Dimmesdale's sickness lay not in his body, but in his mind: He
was holding a secret, a deep, dark, secret, that was destroying him. By
asking Dimmesdale if h .....
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With And Without The State In
Words: 1825 - Pages: 7.... how the outside world does not
provide resolutions their desolate existence and to help alleviate the conditions of daily life.
The distance between the state, the outer world and the people,
the inner world, creates an ignorance that the state refuses to attend. It
is widely known the two factors for the makeup of a civilization lies in
the people and the state or the state and its people. Without one or the
other to depend on, reliance hinders stability. The functional branch or government in Rome is thousands of miles away that there is a barrier
between the Italian people. Because the capital is not located .....
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To Be A Slave: Analysis
Words: 1221 - Pages: 5.... act of craftsmanship made the masters think he was
torturing the slaves even though it was all an illusion to satisfy the
drivers.
Another of the hardships slaves had to face was the auction block.
Most of the young children were sold off before their mothers even had a
chance to raise them. Slaves were sold and split away from families all the
time. Most slave mothers lost most, if not all of their children to
complete strangers who had fat wallets and no consideration. The children
would be raised into bondage and be kept in shackles most of their lives. A
slave named Charles Ball is a perfect example of this monstrosity. His life
wa .....
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The Realization Of Passion In Jane Eyre
Words: 1219 - Pages: 5.... plays one of these life determining foils to Jane
Eyre. His confidence, devotion and reason intrigue Jane almost enough to
silence her inner passionate spirit , but it is the forces of nature that
prove to be stronger than human will.
The life path of a Victorian woman was somewhat limited in it's
direction and expression of individuality. Jane Eyre strongly adheres to
the Victorian morality which was dominated by the Anglican party of the
Church of England in which passion and emotion were kept concealed. Jane's
instinct for asserting herself was stifled at an early age and could only
be expressed through defiance. The defiant declar .....
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Book Report, Reinventing Government
Words: 1244 - Pages: 5.... combat corruption and control the internal workings of government—it has outlived its usefulness. They claim that the development of the bureaucracy cleaned up much of the corruption, but, “like a howitzer brought out to shoot ants, it left us with other problems.” The new problems grew out of the focus on internal processes and not, necessarily, effective outputs. The slower pace of society, technologies, and information availability allowed bureaucracies to be basically successful as it was still be able to handle the fundamental problems and services that the public wanted addressed.
Osborne and Gaebler point out a variety of re .....
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