Father Cry Billy Wilson Analysis

Decent Essays
Father Cry (Reading Response) “Father Cry,” by Billy Wilson, was an intriguing book, which highlighted the crucial need of physical and spiritual fathers of many young people of today’s society. The use of Wilson’s personal testimony made the book captivating and easier to read and relate to. Mr. Wilson’s difficulties with his father is something that many youth in today’s society experience.
The book also points of the importance of spiritual parents in lives of this generation. It highlights the trust issues some youth experience from the broken promises and failed expectations of those they once considered spiritual parents. The chapters that spoke to me the most were “Generation to Generation,” and “Spiritual Parents Needed Now!” I compeletely

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    What is the point in even writing a story about a father and son relationship? The relationship between a father and son can vary depending on the person, but “Arm Wrestling with My Father” is a wonderful example as to how a father and son form their own connection. Brad Manning enlightens the reader on how Manning and his father formed their own connection. Unusual to some, but to Manning it is the form of bond he gets to have with his father which is very special. Brad Manning really shows off this father and son relationship by using the following elements of rhetoric; the purpose, thesis, audience, methods of development, and the language his writing.…

    • 1448 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Between the years of 1776 and 1865 there were a tremendous amount of historical movements that examined the activities and causes of the revolutionary members in which they were paid little attention too. In Joyce Appleby’s Inheriting the Revolution, she writes about a social history about the first generation of Americans and those who fought the American Revolution but, as the title specifies, many who inherited it, those who had to figure out their parents daring advisory of liberty looked like on ground. Appleby explores business, politics, and family life, she examines this generation’s grapple with slavery, their involvement in biblical revivals. This novel is filled with data gathered on thousands of people, as well as hundreds of…

    • 1432 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    When he too failed to awaken her he threw himself on her body weeping, cursing himself for having been a bad son. I had never seen my father cry before, and found it strange and frightening. He was acting like a fellow child who had been beaten. I wished he would stop, but he cried for a long…

    • 1438 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    A father’s job is to care for his children, to keep them safe from harm. Unfortunately, it doesn’t always work out that way as is made clear in two Jess Walter’s stories, “Please” and “We Live in Water” from a book of the same name We Live in Water. In “Please” the son in the story lives with his mom, Carla, and her druggie boyfriend, Jeff in an environment where drugs come first. Tommy, the absentee father, has little control regarding the safety of his child.…

    • 1385 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The controversy of if a relationship with fathers growing up is important has been a argumentative topic for a while. Some believe that a relationship is essential while others disagree. Authors Sarah Vowell in “Shooting Dad” and Brad Manning in “Arm Wrestling with My Father” think that this relationship is important. Even though they both think their fathers are important they describe their views about them differently as they go throughout their childhoods, adolescence and young adulthoods. In her childhood, Vowel sees her father as a “god like figure” but not in the way one would think.…

    • 859 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    For most situations, there is a defining moment. That moment for this story is not my own. ‘Cat’s in the Cradle’, written by Harry Chapin is a song about a father who neglects his son while he is growing up. When the child is going through adolescence, he tells his father that when he grows up, he is going to be like him. The song contains empty promises and missed opportunities.…

    • 1139 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    His approach is emotional and very well used to describe his ethos. The author also demonstrates a great example in which he anonymously asks these parents why…

    • 221 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    How important a role does a father play in a child’s life? A father plays the most important role in a child’s life. A father is an equal partner in care giving and his presence and effort plays a very important role in his daughter’s life. But some people are not ready to accept this huge responsibility and shy away from it. One of those people is Sam who neglected his daughter also named Sam and physically and mentally abused her.…

    • 1394 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    1. What is happening in this poem? I feel that was is going on his this poem is; the brutal fight of a boy with is alcoholic father. The poet is showing you that he is very aware of what is going on with his father. He remembers what everything smells like, what everything felt like.…

    • 201 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Comparing and Contrasting “A Boy Named Sue” and “Cat’s and the Cradle” Twenty-four million children in America live in a fatherless household. Studies have shown that family structure greatly impacts a child’s life. Children without fathers are more involved in crime, more likely to live in poverty, and struggle with behavioral problems. “A Boy Named Sue” by Johnny Cash, and “Cat’s in the Cradle” by Harry Chapin, are songs that focus on two boys with absent fathers. The songs portray how a missing father similarly affected the main characters, even though they lived very different lives.…

    • 1013 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Other Wes Moore by Wes Moore is about two kids who grew up with the same name- Wes Moore. The author of this book was one of the two kids and he explains both his childhood and the other Wes Moores childhood. Both of these kids had similar child life experiences. They both grew up fatherless and had many of the same setbacks in life. Some of these setbacks may be with drugs, violence, and poverty.…

    • 1561 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The relationship between a father and a son is often very special. A father will do anything for his son; however, in “The Road” by Cormac McCarthy, the father goes above and beyond to make sure that his son is protected. Although the name of the father is not revealed in the book, the reader is given much insight to the father character through both his actions and his words. The father endures several challenges on his journey on the road, but he is able to provide for the boy. “The Road” illustrates the many struggles that a father will have to face, as well as the great lengths that he will go to in order to make sure that he can provide the best for his son.…

    • 1564 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The father-son relationship has flourished from the ancient times of cave fathers who taught their sons how to hunt, to the modern day dads who teach their sons how to play golf. A good father is one who can teach his son how to grow into a mature young man. Some fathers do this in unconditional ways; however, if the father is able to teach his son how to be a man, he has done his job. One writer who dives deep into this father son relationship is Scott Russell Sanders.…

    • 1426 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden and “My Father’s Song” by Simon J. Ortiz, there is love found within by a man’s memories of his childhood relationship with his Father. “Those Winter Sundays” is about a man who is remembering the relationship he had with his father through regret, because he realizes how unappreciative he was. “My Father’s Song” is a man reminiscing on the actions his father makes when showing him the value of life and how to grow up. Within both of these poems the father-son relationship does not show verbal communication. In “Those Winter Sundays,” this lack of communication helps indicate the distance between the two, whereas the communication breakdown in “My Father’s Song” reflects the connection that the two…

    • 2056 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Both Theodore Roethke and Robert Hayden are known for having daddy issues... The tones used and the attitudes conveyed while they address them in their works, however, is juxtaposing. Their choices in speakers make all the difference. Roethke speaks through his child persona, desperately trying to slip back into that beloved childhood memory of his papa waltzing him to bed. Hayden is also recalling a childhood memory but he is doing so from a distance, as an adult looking back.…

    • 994 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays