She felt like her parents did not want her because when she moved in with her dad, he was always out with his girlfriend, and her mother had thrown her out of the house. She had no one, she was in this world all alone. She viewed the world as a cruel heartless places that she did not want to be…
How did Claudette adapt over time from a wolf ready to kill anything it sees, to a functioning human? Claudette and her wolf sisters were sent by their parents to St. Lucy’s to become humans and live a better life. Although this may sound easy the pack must go through many tough challenges to reach the goal of being a human. This includes learning how to walk, talk, act appropriate and many others. Throughout the time at saint Lucy’s Claudette has transformed into a human, but overall she still has some learning to do before she can truly be one.…
It’s one thing to have a person you really care about get seriously injured, but if you learn about their death while you weren’t there it or don’t know about it, it stings even more. Even though they had just learned about Johnny’s death, they would still all run out to assist one another like they did for Dally. As everything unfolded about Johnny, the group all ran out to assist Dally after they had been informed about what he had done. “Johnny... he’s dead.” My voice sounded strange, even to me...…
Sitting at the bus stop, feeling the cool concrete beneath his feet, and the chipped, worn down bench, Goober waited anxiously for the bus. Sure, he felt bad leaving Jerry behind, but it would’ve felt worse to stay at a place as evil as Trinity. The bus pulled up, and Goober stepped on the bus. Walking through the aisle, he realized he hadn’t even begun to worry about fitting in at his new school. He’d never been to a public school, and it’s hard to be the new kid as a sophomore.…
It all started when someone left the window open. Uno could tell from the purple shine of the UV lamp posts outside that it was now night time. He climbed onto the windowsill and braced himself for the jump. He knew he shouldn't leave but his own curiosity was to much to bear. The purple light danced upon his being as he fell from the window, and landed on the artificial grass with plop.…
Within the movie, Fifty First Dates, there are several interpersonal relationships that could be analyzed. Henry and Lucy, Lucy and her father, Lucy’s father and brother, as well as plenty of other relationships, though I believe the more interesting relationships lie in those connected to Lucy. For this paper, I will focus on the development of Henry and Lucy’s relationship, as it is not quite the normal progression of a relationship given Lucy’s memory problems. To show the unconventional stages of their relationship, I will discuss several turning point scenes in the movie that bring the pair closer together. The couple also face several relationship challenges throughout the movie that threaten to break the pair apart.…
Piggy grabbed the conch and stood on top of a rock that made him much taller than he really was. “I have the conch, can I speak please!” he shouted at all the other boys. No one listened until Piggy smashed the conch on the rock he was standing on. Everyone froze, Ralph backed away and sat behind Piggy.…
These cause her to "lose her head entirely" and become "mad with the power of inciting such rage" (3). When she feels like this, she can't control the mix of emotions she is feeling. Instead, she goes and destroys objects that she feels symbolize too much hope and beauty. Also, Lizabeth tells me that her "need for her mother who is never there, the hopelessness of their poverty and the degradation, the bewilderment of being child nor women, and yet both at once... [these feelings] are combined into one great impulse towards destruction" (4).…
It’s been five weeks, five weeks since they were found. Ralph sat on the ground staring at the white blank wall, his face stuck in dull trance. He hasn’t spoken since the day all the boys were rescued. A low hum was all that Ralph could hear. Images of Piggy and the island flashed into his mind, Ralph didn’t flinch, he didn’t want to remember.…
And you didn't shout at one another. And it made me so sad because it was like you didn't really need me at all. And somehow that was worse than you and me arguing all of the time because it was like I was invisible.” That was the motive of why she had left them to go and stay with Roger (Mr.Shears). When we see her during the novel she is angry at many people, including herself which is very confusing for both Christopher and the reader to comprehend.…
“Jenna? Are you going to come with us?” my dad whispers, gently awaking me from my land of dreams. I rub my tired eyes open. “Of course I am,” I groan, stretching the sleepiness from my body.…
Frankenstein Alternate Ending The machine was whirring quietly as Victor worked shakily. The machine was quite large, looming taller than Victor himself. It was beside a table that laid the soon to be bride of the creature, draped under a cloth. A cascading of flips and switches were being made by Victor as he worked fearfully and restlessly.…
The other conflict that took place in the story was that she was basically abandoned by her own family. In the story, the author states on paragraph 47 " The real punishment was not the raid swiftly inflicted by the villagers, but the family 's deliberately forgetting her." The author also infers in the same paragraph that she was an embarrassment to the family when she says " We say…
Atwood’s representation of the landscape and the wilderness in “Death by Landscape” is employed to symbolize the inscribing of Atwood’s portrayal of the self in a post-colonial setting; as it foregrounds a post-colonial topic. The symbolic usage of the landscape illustrates the explorations of the national and geographical identities, social class, and the psychological boundaries. The wilderness illustrates the hierarchical constructions of gendered and national identities. On the margins of the state of empire, Atwood situates her story in both the landscape and the city. Both the city and the wilderness function, in differing ways, as a vehicle and a symbolic locus for the ethic identity’s strata, the historical and cultural experience, and the social class; as these meanings are portrayed through Lois and Lucy.…
Lucy Westenra is an innocent, flirtatious young woman at the beginning of this novel who goes through some of the most drastic changes. Darkness overtakes Lucy who is always known for being blissful and caring. She transitions into a being that no one wants to be associated with, and her presence is dreaded. She is faced with danger, sickness, death; everything around her is testing the simple person she had grown up to be. Eventually, she isn’t able to go back to the person she once was and is forever supposed to be a creature, the opposite of the way she was.…