Instructions

Hello Seventh Period!

For your ORB written assignment, I am requiring you to make three postings about your ORB to this blog. You must choose three different options from the "blogging options" handout (on First Class). I am looking for superb commentary, which should make obvious why your ORB "educates your conscience."

Please, adhere to the expectations explained on the rubric (also on First Class).

Happy blogging!

Monday, March 22, 2010

The Red Badge of Courage

Luke Blaylock

Theme

As the title states, one of the main themes in the book is courage. During the course of the book, Henry’s idea on the meaning of courage varies from when he performs well in his first fight, to when he leaves the abandoned soldier. The real definition of courage shines through in the final stages of the book when Henry strides in victoriously from the battle. Courage can be determined by if person stands up for his fears, or if he stands up for what he believes in, even when facing adversity. One of the hardest lessons for Henry to understand is the theme of the universe’s disregard for human life. He acknowledged this after he encounters the squirrel in the woods when he meets a dead soldier. His rotting body shows how life will continue on regardless of the way in which men live and die. “The men dropped here and there like bundles. The captain of the youth’s company had been killed in an early part of the action. His body lay stretched out in the position of a tired man resting, but upon his face there was an astonished and sorrowful look, as if he thought some friend had done him an ill turn.” This works perfectly for this theme because it illustrates the reality of war, and how life continues no matter if these men had lived or died.


Setting

The setting for this novel was during the Civil War. The Union camp where Henry is recruited is described to have a nearby river. The weather seems to be pleasant and from the author’s description, never seemed to have bad weather. The majority of the book is taken place on a bloody, gory, and dirty battlefield, with men of all ages and backgrounds falling to the ground. This is important to the story because it plays a large part in Henry regaining his pride and becoming a hero. If he could survive this setting it would really bring back his courage as well. Very few people have to survive through this gruesome setting and many other people would not survive. Although many men died on this field, this is the place where Henry Fleming would overcome his selfishness and earn his courage, proving to him that he is a true hero.


Character Sketch

Henry Fleming is the most important figure in the book and he described by the author as the young soldier. The author emphasizes Henry’s age to make sure the readers understand that he is one the youngest soldiers, and is fighting with many seasoned veteran soldiers. Henry spends much of his time dreaming of have all the glory and fame in battle; he almost comes off as selfish. Most soldiers in the war are fighting for their country and for self pride but Henry is different, he only cares about his own reputation after battle. One time he is in a battle, and instead of being selfish, he is inspired by the comradery, and the sense of family between the soldiers, in the midst of all of this selflessness, he becomes a great fighter. Throughout the book, Henry matures the most of all the characters example of that is at the beginning he dreams and fantasizes of becoming a hero; in end he earns his right to be remembered as a hero.

Friday, March 12, 2010

A Separate Peace-Theme

Olivia Winton

Theme

One of the several themes of the book is jealousy. The whole time, Gene is jealous of Finny’s natural athletic ability and he wishes he could do the same. Gene is purely academic and has little ability to do athletics. “ I was beginning to see that Phineas could get away with anything. I couldn’t help envying him that a little, which was perfectly normal. There was no harm in envying your best friend” (25). Gene is also insecure about what he can do. He doesn’t believe that he is as good at school as Finny tells him he is. I can be jealous of people sometimes, but it is never long lasting like Gene’s jealousy of Finny. It’s usually something about a certain thing they have that I want, or something they did that I should have done, it is never of being a whole new type of person. I like who I am, but I do get jealous and Gene needs a major boost in self-confidence.

A Separate Peace-Top 10 Memorable Things

Olivia Winton

Top 10 Memorable Things

10. Finny and Gene starting to have a strain on their relationship and them starting to not be so close. (After the fall)

9. Phineas creating the Super Suicide Society over the summer at school and them having regular meetings

8. The war starting to get to the boys and it starting to be a big factor.

7. The “Butt Room” where Gene would go down for a smoke with his friends.

6. Gene wanting to go in to the draft but can’t because he doesn’t want to leave Phineas behind.

5. How Phineas was always able to talk himself out of things. Once, when they were late for dinner, he talked himself and Gene right out of it.

4. Finny training Gene to be the new star of athletics.

3. Phineas and Gene being best friends and inseparable, even though they are complete opposites. Phineas is the sports player, and Gene is the academic scholar. (Before the fall)

2. When Finny broke his leg when he was trying to help Gene climb the tree and fall in to a river. This injury ended his sports career forever, and that was what his whole life was involved in.

1. When Finny fell down the staircase and broke his leg again. He then had to have surgery on it, which ended badly. While the doctor was operating on his leg, some of the bone marrow accidently went in to his bloodstream and went to his heart, killing him.

A Separate Peace-Character Sketch

Olivia Winton

Character Sketch

Phineas, in A Separate Peace, strikes me as a typical, sports stud boy who is good at almost everything. Phineas, also known as Finny, gets himself in to some trouble, but he always knows how to talk himself out of it. One night, Finny and Gene and a couple other friends were late to dinner. Mr. Prud’homme was waiting for them to get them in trouble but Finny just worked his magic and got them out of it. “Mr. Prud’homme released his breath with a sort of amazed laugh, stared at Finny for a while, and that was all there was to it” (23). Finny is the person who guys are jealous of in athletics. He is the perfect teenage boy, except for that he struggles in school a little bit. When Finny’s dreams are taken away from him when he breaks his leg both times, he now starts focusing on making Gene be the sports star. He stopped thinking solely about himself, and started to spread his experience.

Summer Ball

Michael Pappas
Setting

It was this year in Main in the Summer. The author describes the setting as in the middle of a forest of trees next to a lake. Yes, because it would be hot but not to hot and pretty. The story would be very different because they wouldnt be able to play basketball if it was cold in winter time.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Summer Ball

Michael Pappas

Explore Feelings

There was one scene that I found especially touching. In this scene Danny, Will, Ty, and Zach steal a camp canoe to see Danny's best [girl]friend. Tess manages to talk Danny through the hard time he's going through, making him want to stay at camp. "I'm glad your here,' he said. 'I also know that,' Tess said. 'Now tell me some stuff I don't know.'" (136). It showed how much Danny relies on his friends as well as showing how much he values his relationship with Tess and her advice. It foreshadows her coming to camp to take pictures, where Danny turns into the jealous teenager when he sees her talking to the kid at camp he hates most. The same guy who later breaks her favorite camera, Lamar. the scene is significant because it is when Danny changes his mind about quitting camp. Yes, it really puts the image of a boy getting his mind changed by his best [girl]friend, and the amount a boy will do for a girl.

Secret Life of Bees- Acrostic

Wynne Hobbs

Acrostic


August Boatwrite. A woman who cared about all living creatures, how they felt, and what they needed. She felt what others felt, and treated everyone the same. All who knew her, loved her, and she loved them all back the same. August was a colored woman in the sixties, with a strong career of beekeeping, and everyone pulling for her.


Understanding of others. She always seemed to have a way with people. Everyone loved her, and felt good around her. Being with August is living in a dream of careful love. Talking to her was like knocking a glass of feelings over in front of her and watching them spill out everywhere.


Grateful for all of her blessings. Being a colored woman in the sixties, she faced a lot of racism as she was independent and having a lot of money. Some people hated her for it, and she just ignored their hatred. Mostly all she saw was positive. Whenever something went wrong, she was quick to fix it but forgiving, and found a way to be grateful for the accident.


Uplifting and positive, this strong woman was always lifting others up. Whether she was helping a sister, friend, or Lily, August tried her best to keep the household running and happy. Her philosophy when she was beekeeping, was to send love to the bees. For most people, that would be extremely hard to do considering the fact that they sting you. She applied her beekeeping ways to her own life outside and sent love to even the meanest of people.


Sister. August, a Boatwrite sister, stressed sisterhood and bonding with her family in their pink house of blessings. She was the oldest and wisest, keeping everything in the house in line. When May died, she was the one to tell everyone that that was where May wanted to be, and to be happy for her to be with her twin who she missed so very much.


True mother. August was a true leader, mother and hero. Not having any children of her own, she took Lily into their household and treating her as her own child. She was also a main leader in the Sisters of Mary, which was a group of her closest friends who would come to their house every sunday to worship God with her. She was a strong woman and always kept her chin up high.

Nineteen Minutes: Theme

Caroline Oden

Theme

There are various themes in Nineteen Minutes, however the one that is most obvious to me is how bullying can effect people’s lives. Peter Houghton suffered through relentless bullying for twelve long years, resulting in a serious psychological disorder. His syndrome was called post-traumatic stress disorder, where a child cannot differentiate between an immediate threat and a distant threat. “Even though you an I might be able to walk down the hall and spy a bully who’s paying no attention to us, Peter would see that same person and his heart rate would speed up…his body would sidle a little closer to the wall…because Peter was sure he’d be noticed, threatened, beaten, and hurt” (364). Peter suffered through this condition for many years causing him to react in a violent manor. He killed ten people in all, many of who had bullied him the majority of his life in school. Because he was bullied, Peter became extremely insecure and was glued to the thought that he wasn’t good enough to be alive. Being bullied also caused him to seek revenge on those who had emotionally tortured him; therefore killing them causing many people to suffer over their losses. Jodi Picoult shows how effective bullying can be by proving a strong impacting message of its unnecessary cruelty. Bullying causes people to loose their self-esteem and doubt themselves.

Loyalty is another theme often expressed. Through thick and thin Josie continuously tried to stick up for Peter. She was always sympathetic towards him and tried to engage in conversations frequently throughout middle school. As time swept by, Josie and Peter drifted further apart and they didn’t talk as much, until they started working together in high school. Josie would speak to Peter while at work, but found it embarrassing to even associate with him during school. The fact that Josie would communicate with Peter at work showed that she still cared about him and wanted to be his friend despite their differences and their different friends.

I too have been a victim of bullying and have felt the support and devotion of true loyal friends. Bullying takes away one’s self-confidence and is unnecessary cruel torture. As beaten up as I have felt by torture, the love and encouragement of my true friends kept me going. Being a loyal friend is a greater gift than I’ve ever realized.

Heat by Mike Lupica- Setting

The setting was in the poor parts of the Bronx, specifically 825 Gerard street. It was in the Spring because I know that in the summer is when the Little League World Series was so they had to win their division to make it there, to Williamsport, PA. I would love to be in this setting because it seemed somewhat peaceful and he lived right by the stadium and the field where the Clippers played all their games. If it was set in a different time or place then Michael would possibly like a different team or they might not have been an "El Grande" yet; maybe it would have been as early as Babe Ruth or another great. "It's (Yankee Stadium) so... big" (218).

Nineteen Minutes - Setting

Megan Rooney
Nineteen Minutes- Setting

The settings of the novel Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult includes the Cormier's house, the courtroom, and the jail, among others, but i think one of the most important and pivotal locations in this book is Sterling High School. Nineteen Minutes takes place mainly in the spring and summer of 2007, but significant portions of the novel are made up of flashbacks, starting from the day the Peter and Josie’s mothers met in a pregnancy class up until even the day of the murders. One of the main settings is the school where Peter goes on a killing spree, slaughtering ten and injuring even more. This setting, while not frequented by the characters because it holds such horrible memories, is essential to the story since it was where the shooting occurred. Nineteen Minutes is all about the causes, events, and effects of such a tragedy, and therefore it is probably the most important of all the settings. When Patrick rushes to the scene while Peter is still at large, the warzone he encounters is chaotic- “a constellation of students running out of the school... holding up a sign... that read ‘HELP US’... sobbing... blood melting pink on the snow... parents... screaming out names of their missing children... not enough ambulances, not enough officers, and no plan for how to react when the world as you know it went to pieces... the worst thing Patrick had ever seen... [hours later,] there were still students streaming out of Sterling High...the mass exodus... [left them] hyperventilating or hysterical...in shock.... the fire alarms were still ringing... shattered glass, fire engines, smoke. Blood... sirens” (21-50). The school is basically abandoned for almost a year. None of the kids who were at school that day can bear to return to the place where they lost friends, classmates, and a teacher. It just reminded them a day that many wanted to forget- a day that changed their lives forever. On the one year anniversary of the shooting, we see Sterling High School again, reopened, “an enormous glass atrium covered the sot where the gymnasium and locker room had been... to one side of the atrium, [there] were ten charirs, unlike the rest of the seats in the atrium, these had back and were painted white. You had to look closely to see that they had been bolted to the floor... they did not have names or placards on them, but everyone knew why they were there.” (454). This memorial is reminding all the students that while where the horrible murders took place were gone, the memories of the kids that died were not. They will always be remembered, and couldn’t be forgotten if they tried. It was necessary to change the scenery; if not, I doubt they could take being there. I would not like to be in this setting, neither on the day of the shooting or three hundred sixty-five days later. Its frightening and terrible and just plain scary when the event took place; its solemn and silent and still a little frightening at the memory of what happened a year later. It would be hard to trust kids at school if I had been in this setting.

Around the World in 80 Days - Acrostic

Athankful person
After Aodua was rescued by Mr. Fogg, Passepartout,and the Parsee, she was EXTREMELY thankful and expressed much gratitude toward them. During the boat ride to Hong Kong, she expressed her gratitude to him. Not only did she thank Mr. Fogg numerous times on the boat, but she also was generally kind to him, which Mr. Fogg enjoyed. Although, on the outside, Mr. Fogg seemed cold, it was a kind gesture on his part to suggest the rescue of Aodua.
Obtainable
Luckily, Aouda was obtainable. If she hadn't been, then she wouldn't have been rescued, Furthermore, Mr. Fogg wouldn't have found the love of his life and he would likely have never married. If she had not been rescued, than Mr Fogg's life might have been very different. One reason that made Aouda more obtainable was that Mr. Fogg was persistent. Without his good ideas and persistence, obtaining Aodua would have been impossible.

Uplifting.
When Aouda was rescued by Mr. Fogg, she felt uplifted from her current situation. When she was kidnapped by fanatical Hindus,she was drugged, and put on a stake to be burned. If she hadn't been drugged she would've been thinking how horrible her life was. Her new life with Mr Fogg was about to begin. Most people would agree that this was a turning point in her life and that it was a true uplifting moment.

Dainty
Aodua is a Parsee Indian princess. Most princesses are delicate and particular.She was a rather small princess and often appeared delicate and dainty.However,at certain times such as in choppy waves on the boat ride to Hong Kong, she put up with the waves and certainly didn't show those characteristics of a frail princess.

At risk
Aouda was at risk. She was forced to marry an old Rajah. However, he died. Once he died,then the fanatical Hindus came in and drugged her and force her onto a stake where she was to be burned.These evebts would likely not have happened to an ordinary person, only an important princess.

The Fellowship of the Ring- Acrostic Poem

Kelsey Schmitt
Acrostic Poem

F-Friendly. Frodo Baggins is a social hobbit, a bit queer but pleasant enough by Hobbit standards. He does not disturb the peace although he does connect himself with those who do. Frodo indirectly stirs up trouble, at least by association.
R- remarkable. The fact that such a small being could bear a burden like that of the Ring of Power is amazing. Frodo should have crumbled under the influence of the Ring but he never swayed in his will to destroy it.
O- Optimistic. Frodo has very few doubts that they will make it to Mordor. He has faith in himself and the rest of the Fellowship that they will succeed.
D- Daring. The hobbit is not at all obliged to participate in this quest but he volunteers to attempt a dangerous journey into the heart of Evil's lair and destroy their most wanted item. "with a last effort, lifting up his sword, 'you shall have neither the Ring nor me!'" (227).
O-open minded. Under the influence of the Ring, Frodo is the only one of many present that does not fall to arguing. This is why he is selected to be ring-bearer because he can resist its power and keep an open mind and heart.

Heat by Mike Lupica- Theme

The message the author was trying to portray was to never give up, no matter the odds. It was an effective message that got to me loud and clear. Other themes that might have been less obvious were to follow your passion and always keep hope in days that are bad. This theme related to me last year with my summer baseball when i was fielding well but my batting was off.
"This wasn't his whole dream.
But he had to admit:
It would sure do for now" (212).

The Fellowship of the Ring- List

One Gross-144. The number of people Bilbo invited to his birthday "Together we score on hundred and forty-four. Your numbers were chosen to fit this remarkable total: One Gross, if I may use the expression...Many of the guests were insulted, feeling sure they had only been asked to fill up the required number. 'One Gross, indeed!'" (38).
Black Rider- a mysterious hooded horseman. They are dressed entirely in black and ride a skeletal horse. These shadowmen have been following Frodo and company.
The Ring- a magical ring, forged by Sauron in Mt. Doom. It contains all of his malice and hatred. Bilbo found it long ago by chance and has passed it on to Frodo. It has the power of invisibility.
Sauron- the evil lord of old. He resides in the East and awaits the return of his ring and thus the return of his full power.
Hobbit- small, hairy people. They live in hills and love to eat and garden. They do not like any change--order is normalcy, and normalcy is comfort "for they love peace and quiet and good tilled earth: a well-ordered and well-farmed countryside was their favourite haunt" (10).

Three Rings for Elven-kings under sky,
Seven for the Dwarf-lords in their halls of stone,
Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die,
One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

This is the spell of the Ring and brings together the entire plot of the book.

The Fellowship of the Ring- Literary Techniques

Kelsey Schmitt
Literary Techniques

Frodo and his companions journeyed through the Shire. They had been straying from the path but eventually night fell and "Twilight was about them as they crept back to the lane. The West wind was sighing in the branches. Leaves were whispering. Soon the road began to fall gently but steadily into the dusk" (86). I love this quote because it illustrates the elegance of the forest. It demonstrates how beautiful their world is. This is somewhat ironic, because if they should fail in their quest the world would melt away before Sauron's bloodlust. It is in perfect contrast to how the East appears and foreshadows what their world may become. Tolkien chose to use this personification to give life to his lands, and bring a feeling of serenity to it--something that would inevitably be destroyed if the ring were to be lost.

Just Checking In!

I want to see if this posts correctly. :)

The Lighting Thief - Setting

Gerald Bulloch
Setting

The time period for the adventurous story is modern day, all over various spots in America. The places were described with intriguing detail, and almost made you feel you were in that very spot. The author did a very good job by adding in certain extra details such as other people around them, buidlings, weather, and various other little details. I would enjoy to be in most of the settings that the author portrayed in his book. If the story was set in a different time period, the book would be very dry and boring. When it is set in modern day time period, the reader can relate more to what the author is talking about instead of a book in centuries ago where the reader doesn't quite fully understand what the author is talking about. The book was a cliff hanger and always wanted to make you read more and more, and a big reason for that is the setting. "And yes, Percy, of course they are now in your United States...And we are here" (73). The quote explains that the Olympians (Zeus, Poseiden, Athena, etc..) currently live in America, more specifically on the 600th floor of the Empire State Building.

The Lighting Thief - Explore Feelings

Gerald Bulloch
Explore Feelings

Near the end of the book, a frustrating and surprising scene appears unexpectedly that would WOW some of the readers. Percy Jackson, has just been betrayed by someone who he thought was his close friend. And Luke, the betrayer, was the villian behind the story the whole time. "Oh, I'm leaving, all right, Percy. I brought you down here to say good-bye" (364). Luke has just announced that he is betraying Percy and that he is intending to finish Percy off without anyone knowing. Percy trusted Luke because he was one of the few that actually accepted Percy as a friend. It was a real shock to Percy that Luke had betrayed him and that he was trying to kill him. It sets up a sequel for the first book, because Percy has just been betrayed by one of his only friends, and Percy wants revenge. It affects Percy becuase his whole quest, and all the pain he endured, was caused because of Luke.

The Lighting Thief

Gerald Bulloch
Character Sketch

Percy Jackson, the hero in the book, The Lighting Theif by Rick Riordan, reminds of a stubborn boy, who will do nothing to stop until he gets what he wants. When I first met him, I thought he was just another every day citizen until I read more and found out he was a son of one of the Olympians! Percy was a kind, but fierce person in the novel. He percictently continued to try over and over until he got things right. Even though he was a "hot head" he thought things out stratigecally and sometimes made the 'leap of faith' whenever necessary. He cared for his friends and would not let anything happen to them. He also was a person who put others before his own safety, "I ended up next to the family and the park ranger, who were all screaming now, trying to pry open the emergency doors. I couldn't let them get hurt" (208). The quote shows how Percy puts others before himself. Percy would give up his own life before letting other innocent people died. Based on Percy's behaviour, he seems like a ruthelessly fool who likes to act before he thinks, but when you read on, you find out that he is a courgeous hero who cares for other people.

Heat by Mike Lupica- character sketch

Manny, Michael's best friend, knows all Michael's secrets and habits. My first impression was that he was a very talkative person. He reminds me of myself because i'm very talkative but at the same time i still like to be there for my friends when they need me. What you can learn from Manny's appearance is that he likes to eat a lot. He is also a talkative energetic kid and Michael always says that he is the most entertaining man and always has a plan for everything that could go wrong. "Michael could see Manny chatting away, talking with his mouth and his hands at the same time, in a way that always made Michael wonder if the hands were trying to keep up with the mouth, or if it was the other way around" (57).

The Lost World: I Am Poem

Rollins Olmsted
I Am Poem

I am Animalia Dinosauria: terrible lizard

I see a menacing assassin hurtling through a stunning yet shadowy space,
“A giant meteorite, many miles in diameter…” (x) speeding towards earth.
I smell the disastrous stench of death and destruction,
As the unmistakable odor of mass extinction swirls round the globe.
I hear the whimpers and whines of creatures big and small.
Mother Nature confidently proclaims: “….the reign of the dinosaurs…” (x) has ended.
I taste decayed reptilian flesh and moldy, withered plant life.
Cannibalism triggers two of kind to simultaneously consume their clone.
I feel a catastrophic conclusion to the Cretaceous Period,
As a blanket of “…dust and debris darkens the skies” (x).

I am Animalia Dinosauria: wondrous lizard

I see the resurgence of dinosaurs: a uniquely Costa Rican Renaissance,
As Dino DNA is expertly re-sculpted from a genetic perspective.
I smell the tantalizing trace of anarchy lingering in the tropical air.
Complex species, the dinosaur for one, flourish “…only at the edge of chaos” (4).
I hear the unnerving racket emanating from a beast called man.
The Homo sapiens state the truth: “It is entirely possible that dinosaurs still exist” (8).
I taste ancient, appetizing memories from some 65 million years ago.
As “….rows of sharp predatory teeth…” (24) gnaw on savory recollections of eras long
since past.
I feel euphoric as the K-T Boundary of The Lost World is unearthed.
A return to domination is within the dinosaur’s firm grasp.

I am Animalia Dinosauria: powerful lizard

I see my brethren, the mighty Tyrannosaurus Rex; the Mesozoic’s most celebrated star.
A portrait of a predator “…running at full speed - head low, jaws open, in an unmistakable
posture of attack” (155).
I taste scrumptious foliage that the Sauropod’s long neck allows it to reach;
As herds of giant herbivores devour flavorsome ferns and tasty trees.
I smell urine’s distinctive scent as a pack of Parasaurs prudently mark their terrain.
“A distinctive odor, pungent and sweet-sour…” (220) warns others to beware.
I touch Triceratops’ three twisted, tormenting horns;
As its prickly crown stricks a glancing blow.
I hear the Velociraptors’ brilliantly orchestrated anthem of bloodshed.
Rightly recorded as hissing composers, “…snarling and licking the blood off their
snouts” (306).

I am Animalia Dinosauria: terrible lizard

The Kite Runner- Exploring Feelings (jakesy jordaan)

In the novel The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, the scene where Hassan is assaulted by Assef is the most important scene in the book. This scene happens right after Amir wins the kite contest and Hassan is running the kite for him when he runs into a bully with a grudge, caused by Amir. Assef gets his friends to pin Hassan to the ground and then he sexually assaults him while Amir is watching not doing anything. This scene characterizes both Hassan and Amir. Hassan is characterized as the person who takes all of Amir's falls and punishments. While on the other hand Amir is characterized as an irresponsible coward who will not stand up for a friend in need. Amir "had one last chance to make a decision. One final opportunity to decide who [he] was going to be(67)". Choosing was not easy for him, it was a decision between the beating of a lifetime or a priceless friendship. This scene foreshadows how Amir will act for the rest of his life and his journey back to Afghanistan to face his forgotten past. Also this foreshadows Hassan moving out because he could not stand seeing Amir. This event terrorized Amir for the rest of his life and made him feel guilty about the decisions he made during his childhood. For the rest of his life, he would feel regret for decision he made in the alley on his almost perfect day.

The Kite Runner- Acrostic Poem (jakesy jordaan)

Amir

A- Abapical- In the Kite Runner it seems that whenever Hassan reached his abapical or lowest point Amir reached his highest and vice versa. A great example of this is when Amir finally impresses his father when he wins the Kite flying tournament and he reaches his high point of the story, but Hassan is raped and his friendship with Amir is ruined. This shows how Hassan and Amir are FOILS because they are opposites of each other. Also, Amir is a coward while Hassan is a hero who will stand up for what he believes.

M- Marriage - Even after Amir is married and promises that he and his wife will start out with no secrets he is still unable to tell his wife about the time when he watched his best friend be beaten and raped. This marriage also leads to the time when Amir goes back to Afghanistan to save Hassan's son. His wife is not able to have any kids so Amir ends up adopting Sohrab.

I- Illaudble- Amir had many many actions that were illaudble but the least praiseworthy one was when he framed Hassan for stealing a watch that his father gave him for his birthday. Amir did this because each time he looked into Hassan's eyes he remembered the terrible things he saw and his weakness which is fear. Amir did this even though he knew it would ruin his father's relationship with his childhood friend Rahim Khan. This action was wrong because it is selfish, inconsiderate, and not true.

R- Regret- Amir regretted many things in this book but what he regretted most was not having the courage to stand up for himself and for the things he loved. Any time Amir was getting bullied or jostled around Hassan would come to his rescue and fend off the bullies, but when "Hassan lay with his chest pinned to the ground(66)." he did not help he just watched as his brother was raped by Assef. Amir regrets not helping because it would ruin his friendship with his best friend and brother, make his dad depressed, and make him feel like a coward. Amir would redeem himself in the end when he rescued Hassan's son from the same man who destroyed their relationship.

Secret Life of Bees- I Am Poem

Wynne Hobbs

I Am Poem


I Am

I am fourteen years old and a murderer
I wonder about what would have been
I hear screams. At me.
I see darkness. Everywhere. Why?
I want my mother back
I am fourteen years old and a murderer

I pretend to be someone I'm not
I feel like I'm living a lie
I touch her gloves, her picture, running my hands along them.
I worry they will find out.
I cry When I think of what I've done
I am fourteen years old and a murderer

I understand "All my life I've thought I needed someone to complete me, now I know I need to belong to myself."
I say I'll fess up some day
I dream about her being back with me
I try to do the right thing
I hope he won't find me
I am fourteen Years old and a murderer

The Kite Runner (Connection to current event)

In the Kite runner by, Kaled Hussein one is able to connect events in the book to current events. In the beginning, when the Russians invaded Afghanistan many people looked for leadership. In this case the Taliban stepped up and drove the Russians from there country. This relates to events today because because when the United States invaded Afghanistan the same thing happened and the Taliban stepped up again and is currently trying to drive us out. Also, laws that were imposed during the book are still being enforced today. Some of these laws include dehumanizing certain races, genders, and ages. An example of this in the book is when Hassan is beaten and eventually killed because of his race and beliefs. Hassan's race and ideas lead Amir to secretly and deeply hate him because his father loves a Hazara more than he loves his true son. Wearing burqas has been made law for women because the Taliban do not want them to showing there bodies. Women are commonly beaten in the streets of Afghanistan for any number of reasons or no reason at all. An example of this is when Amir try's to find Hassan's son in the streets of Kabul and a woman is beaten by Taliban police just for making eye contact. Also the book mentions Afghan orphans who had their legs blown off. The Taliban planted mines to try to destroy Russian tanks but they never tried to retrieve any of the mines after the war. Land mines are currently a big problem in Afghanistan and turn many kids into orphans.

Summer Ball

Michael Pappas

Character Sketch

My first impression of Danny Walker was that he was a little guy who got knocked down alot but always kept getting up. In a way he reminds me of Elie Weisel. Although what Danny has to go through is nothing compared to the Holocaust that Elie has to go through, they both over come challenges and keep persevering. We can learn about the challenges he must overcome, the things and people he loves, and his outlook on life. You can tell that people respect him. "You know what this really is? It's Ty's dad cutting you from travel all over again. another grown-up telling you you're not good enough. I thought you always used to tell me that the championship you guys really won in travel was the championship of any kid who got told by an adult they weren't good enough" (137).

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Nineteen Minutes: Explore Feelings

Caroline Oden

Explore Feelings

In Nineteen Minutes, a particularly horrifying scene was when Peter Houghton (a kindergartener at this time) showed one of his father’s rifles to his best friend, Josie Cormier. “It’s heavy,” Josie said. Then Peter: “Here. Like this.”…And there, behind a stack of boxes and a shelf full of home-canned jelly, was Josie, holding a rifle…”Where did you get this?”...”Peter,” Josie said. “He had a key.” “A key?” Alex cried. “To what?” “The safe,” Lacy murmured. “He must have seen Lewis taking out a rifle when he went hunting last weekend” (81). Peter’s actions were frightening, and because of them, Josie was forbidden to have play dates with Peter again. Josie and Peter’s mothers, previously best friends, never spoke again due to a fight started over this terrifying incident. Exposing Josie to the rifle foreshadows the violent, heartbreaking school shooting that Peter created. This unsettling occurrence was one of Peter’s first introductions to guns, paving the way to his expertise handling of guns. However, his knowledge of guns was not always used in a safe, appropriate manor. Josie and Peter began to drift apart, loosing a valuable friendship that would never be the same. Peter became infatuated with guns at an early, unhealthy age, causing him to put himself and others in danger when his own insecurities were the real reason behind his motives.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Nineteen Minutes - Theme

Megan Rooney

Nineteen Minutes: Theme

Nineteen Minutes consists of a lot of themes about high school and the treatment of the outcasts. I think one of the themes of this novel is to not to tease and hurt the geeks like Peter. It shows us some of the consequences of bullying that could occur if kids continue to harass the people who aren’t exactly like them- the so called losers. While Peter’s approach is rare and extreme, what the author is trying to portray is that the outcasts and weirdos are people too, and that this bullying is cruel and horrible. No one should be treated that way. I believe another theme of the novel is to stand up for the bullied if you see it occurring, even if you aren't the bully- be an upstander. But Nineteen Minutes is also about the fact that it is really hard to be an upstander. Josie makes a few attempts to stop Matt and Drew and the others from teasing and bullying Peter “I just... don’t like the way you treat kids who aren’t like us, all right? Just because you don’t want to hang out with losers doesn’t mean you have to torture them, does it?” (218). Josie, however, is quickly rebuffed by her boyfriend and others in the popular group to which she belongs, and so she drops it. This is an example of how Josie might have been able to prevent Peter from snapping, but is pressured by her friends to not mess without it. Peer pressure is a powerful thing, and Josie is too afraid to pursue the thought, frightened she might lose her status. A main point of Nineteen Minutes is to stand up to the persecutors, no matter the cost. If Josie would’ve stopped the bullying, perhaps those ten victims of Peter’s wrath would still be alive. If we DON'T follow the example of Josie, and stand up for what is right even if that isn't the popular thing, we might find that the people we thought were losers are better friends and people then our friends that tease them.

Nineteen Minutes - I Am Poem

Megan Rooney
I Am Poem - Josie

I am

I am a liar, a secret keeper.

Someone stuck in a person that isn’t me

I am scared.

Scared someone will see through my charade

That they will realize that I’m just like him.

Just like my childhood friend.

And reject me, as I rejected him.

Rejected my childhood friend.


I feel trapped.

Trapped in a life

Trapped in a relationship I can’t live with

A relationship I can’t live without.

Trapped in a bubble

My group of friends

I can be "someone [I] don't want to be,

Or... someone... nobody want[s]" (8)

I feel like my world is crashing down on my shoulders,

Like this secret life I live in my head is falling apart,

Breaking down-

Like they can see.


I hear screams and sobs

Only to realize they are my own.

What have I done?
What have I lost?

I’m so scared.

Scared of the voices I hear

And the ones that no longer are able to speak.

Was this my fault?

Was this my fault?

I say I’m fine- nobody believes me

I don’t believe myself.

My life is over, gone

Will never be the same.

He’s gone forever,

Matt is gone forever

My fault.

My fault.


I see my mother falling in love,

Having the relationship she was always too busy to have,

Too busy with me.

I see her trying so hard

To console me, to comfort me, to do

Whatever she can to stop my tears

But there’s no use

I’m inconsolable, comfortless.

Desolate. Dejected. Dying inside.

The shaky ground where my fragile life balanced

Fell.

Crashed and burned, like the lives he destroyed.


I touch memories,

Every day a new one appears.

In the form a t-shirt,

A couch, a car.

Something to remind me of those days

Before it happened.

Before everything changed.

The happier days-

Before the misery that is the present

Began.

It began when it happened,

When he snapped,

When I snapped.

I wish I just kept bending.


I am Josie Cormier.

I was popular and loved and hurtful

And one day I couldn’t take it anymore,

And I cracked, shattered,

Like the way I feel now.

I am guilty.

I am the reason he snapped,

And I am the reason I snapped.

Its

My

Fault.

Nineteen Minutes: Character Sketch

Caroline Oden

Character Sketch

Peter Houghton was a boy who struggled in school socially, for he was everyone’s target. Peter was bullied which made him feel unaccepted, and unsure of himself. He felt that he didn’t belong anywhere, including his family, who he thought only cared about his older brother Joey. The first time that I met Peter in the book, I thought of him as a smaller, nerdy guy. He appeared to me as someone who had anger management and hated the world because he felt he didn’t belong in it. Peter reminds me of a boy that I knew a couple years ago. He was easy to pick on and was very easy to anger. Peter is somewhat like this for the same reasons. Through reading about Peter and his story of how he killed ten of his classmates during a school shooting, I have learned that he felt unwanted in the world and felt that he needed revenge against the popular kids who had bullied him over the years. He initially wanted to kill himself. This shows that he felt as though everyone on Earth would be better off without him, and would have better, happier lives if he weren’t alive. Even when Peter was young he was picked on. One day on the first day of kindergarten, “He was riding inside a bus. And he was sitting next to his best friend in the whole world. “Cool lunch box,” Josie said. He held it up, to show her the way that you could make Superman look like he was moving if you wiggled it, and just then a hand reached across the aisle. A boy with ape arms and a backward baseball cap grabbed the lunch box out of Peter’s grasp. “Hey, freak,” he said, “you want to see Superman fly?” Before Peter understood what the older boy was doing, he opened a window and hurled Peter’s lunch b ox out of it…Peter sank back into his seat. His face felt cold, but his ears were burning. He could hear the boy and his friends laughing, as loud as if it were happening in his own head” (66). This quote tells us that even when Peter was young, all he wanted was to fit in, but he never did. He was prejudged and bullied by everyone, regardless if they knew him or not.

Monday, March 8, 2010

The Thirteenth Tale: Literary Techniques

"... and though she was still pale as death..." (106)

In this scene Ms. Winter is being attacked by her 'wolf' which is the pain that is slowly killing her and she has medication, but she can only take it every few hours and so near the end of the time it comes and attacks. All of the attacks are very surprising because the wolf can sneak up very quietly. In this Ms. Winter was just attacked and lived through to tell Ms. Lea about her wolf. Right after this happened a story was told about how Isabelle, Ms. Winter's mother, was dressed in white and tried to kill a woman in her own home. Isabelle was wearing white and the woman almost saw her gliding, gracefully and she snuck up on her just like the wolf does to Ms. Winter. Death is slowly, quietly coming to attack Ms. Winter one day and it will be pale, almost white just like Isabelle and coming to end the wolf attacks once and for all.

Where the Heart is: Character Sketch

Emily Barnes
Character Sketch

At first Novalee appeared as a timid seventeen year old girl—superstitious, naïve, and hurt. She was dominated and controlled by her abusive boyfriend, Willy Jack, who got her pregnant and abandoned her in a Wal-Mart. She was sweet, shy, and not very educated. Her deep caring for all living people and animals was similar to Birdfoot’s Grampa’s, though at first she was not as brave as he was. As the story progressed, she began to become stronger, happier, and more confident. She spoke out for children and friends and recovered from her traumatic youth. Novalee’s best friend Lexie encouraged her to “Look at what you’ve done for yourself. You have a wonderful child and a home. A family of friends who love you. You have a good job. You’re a great photographer—an artist. You’ve read a whole library of books. You even go to college. You’ve got it all” (332). The most important part of Novalee’s life was exactly what Lexie pointed out—she made it herself. Even though she was treated poorly and left like a piece of trash when she was young, Novalee realized her own potential and built her life successfully. Novalee took her future into her own hands.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Around the World in 80 Days – Theme

I think one of the themes in this book is that you should go for what you believe in. Phileas Fogg believed that he COULD travel around the world in 80 days and despite the beliefs and opinions of other people he succeeded! I think this sends the message that people ought to have their beliefs and values set in their minds and not change them simply because someone (or even thousands) of people say so. I also think the author succeeded in getting out his message. I think this theme can relate to Martin Luther King’s life and how he kept with his campaign even if the odds were against him. MLK made a big impact on how we live today just because he stood up for his beliefs. When Mr. Stuart, one of Phileas’ friends says “You are right, theoretically Mr. Fogg, but practically¬¬–“ Mr. Fogg confidently returns with “Practically also, Mr. Stuart.”

Phileas Fogg – Character Sketch

When I first started reading about Phileas Fogg he seemed like an automaton to me. He was ALWAYS right on time and he always stuck to his schedule. In the beginning of the book, I thought he would lead a pretty boring, disciplined life (boy, was I wrong.) As he travels around the world, I began to see his acts of kindness, things like rescuing Aouda and paying to bail Passepartout out of jail. Another characteristic that comes up alot is how calm Phileas Fogg is. Whenever there is a fork in the road or some trouble that pops up, he remains calm. One quote that I think describes him well is the quote by Passepartout "His master's idea charmed him; he perceived a heart, a soul, under that icy exterior. He began to love Phileas Fogg." I think that first impressions are often incorrect For example, my first impression, that Phileas Fogg was just a robot who went about his day with precise times and sometimes came off as 'cold' was mistaken. However, like Passepartout, throughout the book, I began to see the real picture of Phileas Fogg.

The Color Purple- Explore Feelings

A particularly meaningful and sad scene in The Color Purple was when Celie was giving up on God. This was when Celie was talking to Shug Avery about how she had stopped writing to God and instead started to write to Celie, her sister. While looking out into a corn field and sees one purple flower, she said, “Well, us talk and talk about God, but I’m still adrift. Trying to chase that old white man out of my head. I been so busy thinking bout him I never truly notice nothing God make. Not a blade of corn (how it do that?) not the color purple (where it come from?) Not the little wildflowers. Nothing. (p74).” Celie has always relied on God to heal and help her throughout life but she feels like he isn’t helping her and never actually noticed God. After saying this to Shug, she tries to get Celie to picture God as an image of someone who she can have her own spiritual relationship with. One of the reasons I think that Celie is rejecting God is because she pictures God as a man and Celie doesn’t trust men after all she’s been through. This scene showed the turning point for Celie. She had decided to be more independent and to stand up for herself. This was extremely important for Celie because she had thought that God had forsaken her. Celie was a completely different woman when she decided to stop relying on God and men.

The Thirteenth Tale: Acrostic-Isabelle

Independent. "... she had to be rid of her brother" (69). Isabelle wanted to have her brother out of the picture in this scene so she could go of on a walk with a boy, who she would later run off and marry. Charlie, Isabelle's brother, didn't want her to ever leave his sight and doesn't want her to be independent so he tried to get her to stay with him but she always tricked him and slipped away at the last minute. Despite what Charlie wanted Isabelle went off and became and independent young woman.

Sly. "Everyday she slipped out of Charlie's sight, escaped his grasp and disappeared on her bicycle" (71). When Isabelle slipped away she went and saw Roland, her boyfriend and future husband. Charlie wanted Isabelle all to himself and didn't want her to ever leave because she was the only thing that he cared about. His whole life revolved around her and she is what kept him alive everyday, but Isabelle wanted to be her own person so she would leave when Charlie wasn't looking and not come back until late in the night.

Amazing. Isabelle was odd in many people's opinions but with a couple people she was the thing that made them happy. Charlie, her brother, and Roland, her boyfriend. She was the reason why they woke up every morning. In their eyes she was perfect and had nothing wrong with her at all. Isabelle was a unique young woman who could brighten up anyones day.

Bright. Isabelle was bright woman and always took things in such a positive way. She could put a smile on any one's face starting from when she was a baby. When her mother passed away while having her and her father was in grieving and was really sad and so then the nanny brought Isabelle into her father and he began to smile and not lock himself into his office all day.

Everything. Isabelle was everything to her father, George Angelfield. Whenever he saw her his face would light up and he would feel amazing. He took care of her and did everything for her. She was loved more than her brother and her brother stayed out of the picture and when he did, Charlie could get away with anything and his father would never care because all his father cared about was keeping his little angel, Isabelle, happy.

Loss. Isabelle may not have had lots of losses in her life; she did lose her mother but not like she was to many in her life. Charlie lost Isabelle not once but twice, he lost her once when she left to go be independent and marry her husband. After he died she came back to Charlie for his help with her twins, but then Charlie lost her again to the insane asylum. These things devastated Charlie so much because he fell so much in love with her again when she came back it was just as hard to lose her Isabelle the second time around.

Lunatic. Isabelle was sent to an insane asylum after she tried to kill a woman and had no remembrance of it after. She had to leave her twin daughters and Charlie, who once again lost his sister and this time for sure would never hear or see from her again. Charlie was really sad after this happened and the twin girls were too young to understand that they were losing their mother forever.

Emmeline and Adeline. These are the names of Isabelle's twin daughters that she showed up with at the doorstep of Charlie's house after her husband died and she needed a place to go. These girls were odd and they were interesting and everyone in the town thought that they had a mental illness. Once, they stole a baby in its carriage so that they could play in it and left the baby on the ground where they were playing with the carriage. These girls were trouble makers and they got it all from there insane mother, Isabelle.

The Tenth Circle, Explore Feelings

I remember a particularly sad scene in the book during the time that Trixie was running away. It's a simple scene, but still heartbreaking. Trixie, feeling like her heart and soul didn't match her physical appearance, dyed her light, care-free hair to a dark, unforgiving black. During this thirty-minute process, she contemplated her life, and whether or not she'd ever go back home. She wanted people to know "that it was possible to grow up in an in an instant, that you could look down and see the line in the sand dividing your life now from what it used to be" (277). These couple of words sum up how much Trixie has gone through. It really proves the power of change. Nothing can cause a young girl to become an adult so quickly, except for change, and change is what made Trixie grow. She'd plunged into the her darkest hole when she attempted suicide, but in order to crawl out of that hole she had to grow stronger and stronger. Although this scene isn't even close to as intense as some other parts in the book, I think it is actually a huge turning point in Trixie's life. She's once again changing in an instant. Hair seems to symbolize Trixie's feelings. Earlier in the book, Trixie had gotten a buzz. It made Trixie feel lighter, and it was physically showing people how she had changed. This was the first time that Trixie did something without thinking about what other people thought. Now she's doing it again. This time though she's literally making her dark feelings match her physical appearance. She's telling the truth to everyone around her. I feel like this is when Trixie truly begins her healing process and begins finding herself once again.

The Tenth Circle, Character Sketch: Trixie

At first, Trixie just seemed like a normal 14 year old girl. There was obviously something off about her though. Something wasn't normal. As the book progressed it became more and more obvious that she was lost in sadness. She was confused and vulnerable. Even though Trixie seems different, she actually reminds me of every other teenage girl. She has such a jumble of feelings that she doesn't know what to do with them. Everybody just deals with feelings in a different way. It's obvious that Trixie is very well-liked. She's gorgeous, but also the girl that everybody pays attention too. So, while Trixie is just trying to deal with everything that's happening to her, she has to also deal with overhearing people talking about how "messed-up" she is. When Trixie gets ready every morning she talks about how "these days, her entire life was about making people believe she was someone she wasn't anymore" (20). Even though this quote is brutally honest, it describes Trixie throughout the book. It all starts after Jason broke up with her. She's not herself anymore but she tries to make everybody think she is actually fine. In fact, she didn't even tell her family about how they broke up. When Trixie's best friend Zephyr takes her to a party, Trixie does everything that Zephyr tells her too, and none of this is what Trixie would normally do. She acts wild and falls into peer pressure. That party takes a turn for the worse when she is drugged and raped. After that single act of violence, Trixie's true self is so lost that it seems impossible that it will ever be able to be found again. But, she still tries to act okay around everybody else. When she finally stops pretending, and lets go of trying to lie to everyone, she eventually begins finding herself again.

The Tenth Circle, Acrostic Poem

Forgiveness is not always easy for many people, especially when the mistake is too large to just forget. When it comes to family there is always room for 2nd chances. Sometimes that is hard to remember, and it is especially hard for the Stone family. When mistake after mistake is made, who do you forgive? The Stone family must learn that those that you love must always be forgiven.

Aggression is a contagious disease that jumps from person to person like wildfire, turning us into beasts that we do not recognize. The urge to fight back is inside all of us, it’s just hidden better in some people than in others. One act of violence triggered the otherwise calm Stone family into a chain of aggression. How is it stopped? As we can see in The Tenth Circle, one must find it in ourselves to stop hating and start loving. If not, the structure of trust and happiness that is rooted underneath a family can disenegrate.

Memories can be happy, funny, and pleasing, but choosing to live off of memories is not a good idea. Living in the present is the best idea. You may find yourself turning around to your loved one and thinking, “I wish that we could be just like we used to again.” It’s better to work on making the future the best it can be, instead of crying about how your present is not as good as your past.

“It had amazed him: that utter transformation, the understanding that radical change could come in a heartbeat…" (125). Change is part of life, but change can also test the bonds that you have with your loved ones. It takes people to places that they are not used to. People must leave their comfort zone and forget about their daily routine and, most importantly, keep their family as their top priority or suffer the consequences.

Love is the ultimate goal; everybody wants it and needs it. It’s easy for us to forget that we have people that love us. It leaves us feeling alone with nowhere else to turn. What do you do when it seems like all is lost? Trixie Stone teaches us that love is all around us, we just have to open our eyes. She also teaches us that love can never be ended or forgotten, no matter how much it goes through. Love is the super-glue that holds each and every one of us together.

You are the most important part of keeping a family together. It’s so simple to look around and blame everybody else for the crumbling relationship, but it is essentially you that must change. Every relationship is mutual, so whenever one is endangered both people must step up and try to help it. Before you even do that, you must find peace in yourself. If you hate yourself and have no sense of peace, then that does nothing to help anybody around you.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The Color Purple- Acrostic

CELIE

C- Color Purple. Celies soul is painted the color purple. She was a woman that went through plenty of hardships and faced and overcame them. At the end of the novel, Celie learns to fight back with her husband and her father. Also she becomes a happy, independent woman once she gets reunited with her whole family.

E- Everyone abuses her. Whether it was physically or emotionally, all throughout Celie’s life people abused her and took control of her. She had been born being abused so throughout her whole life Celie didn’t know any better. She thought that it was a way of life, but Celie always dreamed of not being hurt and being able to be independent and strong.

L- Love. Celie had a kind and loving soul and treated everyone with respect. Even the people she hated most, she still was nice and obeyed them. Her sister Nettie, and her best friend Shug Avery were the people she loved most in life. Without them, she didn’t have any reason to live. Celie even cared about her children that she thought were hers and her fathers but later found out that he wasn’t her real father.

I- Invisible. Everyone thought that Celie was ugly and mistreated. Therefore she thought that trying to be invisible and silent would hopefully ensure her survival. This plan worked for Celie, but it made her life miserable. Because her dad and husband said she was a mistake and that she would have been better not born, Celie never had the self-confidence to rise up and prove them wrong.

E- Every reason for doubting God. During Celie’s life, she had a lot of doubts towards God. This was because in all of the awful times she went through, she asked where God was in all of this and why he wasn’t helping her. She wrote letters to God every day, which was like a diary. But once she gave up hope on God because he wasn’t doing anything she started to address her diary to Nettie, her sister. In the end Celie learns how to love God once again.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

The Fellowship of the Ring: Setting

The settings in the book represent the theme of good vs. evil. The story starts in the Shire, the home of all the Hobbits. It is a peaceful place where the Hobbits live among their large families and lead rather simple lives. The town of Hobbiton lies, “in the gentle valley of the water” (81). However, to save the Shire, Frodo must leave and face greater danger. They had to pass through some of the darkest places in the world, such as Moria, once one of the dwarves’ great mines that is now a tomb to many who were there when they were attacked by orcs. They also passed through mountains and plains where they were constantly hunted by Black Riders. To make their journey even more difficult, most of it was during the winter, which represents that it is a time of little hope but the world will turn and the spring will come again. At one point, they arrived in Rivendell, a magical outcrop of hope where, “whether you like food or sleep or story-telling or singing, or just sitting and thinking best, or a pleasant mixture of them all… merely to be there was a cure for weariness, fear, and sadness” (252). Spending time there rejuvenated them so they could continue out into the dark places of the world, the only places where they could save the good places that they loved so much.

The Fellowship of the Ring: Themes

Several themes dominate the moral side of the story, such as Good vs. Evil. The evil side is defined by the fact that Sauron is working to enslave all of Middle Earth for the benefit of Me, Myself, and I, while the good side can be simply defined as everyone working against him or not aiding him. These two sides must clash and one must win, and the good side must not be daunted by the evil that seems so vast. The good side must also overcome greed for the Ring’s power and riches. They must also over come the great differences in the nations that are brought together by the Fellowship. Such as the dwarves, whose greed, despite their great sense of honor, have led them into disfavor with many elves. Ironically, Gimli the dwarf and Legolas the elf quickly became the best of friends. There are also the Men, once great kings but always plagued by the weakness of greed, especially for power. Most randomly, the hobbits are for perhaps the first time, involved in a huge international crisis. Hobbits, very small people with hairy feet, love the quiet and fair weather of their beloved Shire, and breakfast, elevensies, lunch, tea, and supper, and they have never been known for a love of great adventures abroad. Of course, Bilbo, Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin completely break that stereotype, minus the food part. These five represent the Shire and, “this is the hour of the Shire-folk, when they arise from their quiet fields to shake the towers and counsels of the Great” (303). The Fellowship of the Ring, complete with a wizard, became a band of brothers ready to fight together in the noblest of causes in ridding the world of the Ring. They made the decision to go to accompany Frodo on their own. The easiest decision and the hardest was for Sam, Merry, and Pippin, because although every part of their hobbit nature told them not to go near anything dangerous and this trip means almost certain death, they have an undeniable sense of loyalty to Frodo that made them want to do nothing but go. “All alone and without me to help you? I couldn’t have borne it, it’d have been the death of me” (457), Sam said after stopping Frodo’s last attempt at going off alone to Mordor.

The Fellowship of the Ring: Character Sketch

Aragorn son of Arathorn, who would be expected to be a great lord, lives, at least for the most part as a weather beaten ranger stealthily crossing wild country to ensure the safety of the Ring, and therefore all of Middle Earth. Even though he is a good friend of Gandalf’s, he did not introduce himself to the Hobbits as so. Rather as Strider, a strange ranger who wanted to help them and had ample knowledge to do it. His reason for this false identity was to test how much they needed to trust rather than the Hobbits trusting him because of Gandalf and possibly making a mistake later.
Aragorn leads them as safely as possible, for the Black Riders were on their trail, to Rivendell, where his identity is revealed to them. After their eventual departure from Rivendell with the new Fellowship and the loss of Gandalf (after which he takes up leadership of the group), he starts to show another side, if only for a few moments, “for the grim years were removed from the face of Aragorn and he seemed clothed in white, a young lord tall and fair”(395). Aragorn’s past, probably less distant than has appeared, and his future are beginning to meet, “Frodo turned and saw Strider, and yet not Strider; for the weatherworn ranger was no longer there. In the stern sat Aragorn son of Arathorn… and his dark hair was blowing in the wind, a light was in his eyes: a king returning from exile to his own land” (442). He will shed the skin of a ranger, lead his people out of this time of dark magic and return to his rightful position.

The Kite Runner: Explore Feelings

"'Let him stay,' Assef said. He grinned. 'Let him watch. Lessons are good things for boys.'...What he fished out of that pocket didn't surprise me one bit: stainless-steel brass knuckles"(287).
This scene is where Amir goes to save his best friends orphaned son who is in the care of a Taliban leader, who happens to be his childhood enemy. Assef is not only his enemy, but the boy who raped Hassan, the boy who tore Amir's world apart. This scene was very difficult to read through because you have to imagine this brutal fight with an abused child watching. Amir is quickly beaten to the point of near death and cannot protect himself. As he is about to be killed, the little boy holds up his sling shot and hits his abuser right in the eye. This some how shows the relationship that Hassan and Amir had when they were little. Hassan, like his son, was the strong courageous one with great insight, and Amir was always struggling. Not all their situations had to do with bullies, but with humbleness or seeking attention. This scene has two main significances. One is that Amir has the chance to save his now only living memory of Hassan. And also, this is his chance to kill the man who hurt his brother. This man scarred Hassan's life and Amir would help him to regret his decision of ever hurting him. This scene had a huge effect on both Sohrab and Amir. This is the first time since 1947 that Amir feels at peace with himself. He has now had the punishment he deserves for watching Assef that snowy afternoon. And Sohrab's life will never be the same. Although he has lost a dad and mother, he has also gained a friend that will stick with him until the end.

The Kite Runner: Acrostic

Amir
A-Ashamed. Amir is ashamed of his past. He will never forgive himself for what he has done to his best friend. He has always been taught to grow up with honor, and that was lost as he watched his own brother walk from his house. Throughout the story his past is racing to catch up with him as he is running away from the deed that cannot be undone.

M-Married. Further into the story, after Amir has moved to the United States, he meets a woman who changes his world. He can't stop thinking about her as they grow closer. They met at a flea market that Baba and Amir sold things at. They soon get married and share everything. They are honest in every way. Still though, Amir can't bring himself to tell her about what happened between him and Hassan all those years back.

I- " My Iftikhar (pride) wasn't stung at all that she had been with a man..." (165). After Amir and Soraya announce their engagement, Soraya feels the urge to tell a secret that she thinks could be a deal breaker. She told Amir about her and another man, yet Amir regrets nothing and is ready to forgive her. And yet, no one is there for him, to tell him that every thing that was done and not done in the past could and would be forgiven. He still had that deed constantly tugging at his emotions, and his choices.

R- Regret. Throughout this whole story regret is a constant theme. Amir will never forgive himself until the person he betrayed, Hassan, forgives him first. Not only that, he feels everything that has happened since that tragedy has been forced there by him and his deeds. Although he acknowledges his weaknesses, it still gnaws at his life. As he later finds out, his own best friend was really his half brother, who was killed in a land mine. Had the event that happened so long ago, the action left undone, led up to this horrible happenstance?