Carol Ann Tomlinson

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    This summer I got my license and took a little adventure. My two friends Cloe, Teya, and I were bored and didn’t have anything to do, so we decided to go to Maryville. We went to Workman’s Chapel, which is right outside of Maryville. Workman’s Chapel is an old haunted church and cemetery. The story behind Workman’s Chapel is that a preacher stabbed a woman in a white dress to death and hid the knife under the floor boards of the church. Another woman was hung from one of the trees towards the…

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    Facts: In January 22, 2008 Candace M. Johnson purchased bullets from a Wal-Mart store in Illinois, without possessing a Firearm Owner’s Identification Card. The Wal-Mart sales clerk did not ask Candace to present her FOID card, which is required in order to posses ammunition or a firearm. By law Candace would not have been able to hold a FOID card after being part of a mental institution five years prior to her suicide. Candace used the bullets she purchased to commit suicide. Johnsons claims…

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    William Faulkner's Use of Characterization in A Rose for Emily In a quote by Margaret Atwood “people are individuals. Yes, they may be expected to be a particular way. But that does not mean they are going to be that way”. William Faulkner in his story A Rose for Emily he very carefully pieces his main character limitations using layers of carefully placed details. That are described through a variety of narrators that vividly describe her as being large scale and also like a tree crumbling. He…

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    In Floyd C. Watkins, the structure of “A Rose for Emily”. Watkins argues that Faulkner had structural flaws, but because he organized Miss Emily’s life in five parts of constant isolation and intrusions appearing all the way up to here death, the story had perfect symmetry. In part one she is approached by the town’s people to pay her taxes. She refuses and slowly starts to withdraw from the community. Part two, has the towns people coming in twice forcefully to collect the dead body of her…

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    “A Rose for Emily,” by William Faulkner, conveys the theme of the decadence and downfall of the deteriorated social conventions by using the symbol of Ms. Emily’s house. The short story uses the flashback technique to describe the Mysterious and secret life of Ms. Emily. To begin with, Ms Emily’s House signifies a monument that has fallen with the respects of the elder townspeople. It is a “big, squarish frame house…set on what [is] once our most [select] street,” this dilapidated house has been…

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    The Prognosis of Alice: Defining the Deficiencies of Pharmacological Treatments for Depressive Disorders Throughout the graphic novel, This One Summer, an underlying theme exists as a result of the interactions Rose has with her mother, Alice. Despite not being as pervasive in the beginning of the story, the onset of a potential depressive disorder gradually becomes apparent as the story shifts focus from Rose and her relationship with her friend, Windy, to a more obvious focus on the health of…

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    Connie: The Little Girl Hidden "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" by Joyce Carol Oates starts with the kind of pressure like any other family goes through when there is a teenager involved. Connie, a 15 year old girl, who is worried of the way she looks even though she knows that she is very pretty. She has long dark blond hair and brown eyes, and she loves to wear shorts with a pull over jersey blouse and flat ballerina slippers with charm bracelets. This story starts with how…

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    Analysis: Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? And he lifted up his eyes and saw the traveler in the open square of the city. And the old man said, “Where are you going? And where do you come from?” (Judges 19:17). Joyce Carol Oates wrote this story in 1966 by. Her fabulous short story “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been” begins with a reference to the main character’s vanity. A compulsive habit of checking her reflection in mirrors to ensure she is better looking than others around…

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    In William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily”, a gray haired woman, named Emily Grierson, fights against a generation much younger than her. In the battle against paying her taxes, Miss Emily had a mindset as though she owed nothing to this new generation. People of her age understood why she was pardoned of paying taxes. The reason for her feelings could have been because when she was younger, her father assisted the small town in a magnificent way. As Faulkner states in the short story, Emily’s…

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    Joyce Carol Oates Satire

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    Joyce Carol Oates was born in a small town in New York in 1938. Not much is mentioned about Oates’ childhood, other than her passion for writing that started early. She wrote many stories and even constructed short books in her elementary years. Oates tried to publish her first novel when she was fifteen, but was turned down because it was thought to be “too depressing” for children her age. Although there were many bumps along the road to becoming a great author, she is now rendered one of the…

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