Historical novel

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    Things By Arundhati Roy

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    In her novel, The God of Small Things, published in 1997, Arundhati Roy succeeds in creating an unorthodox narrative through her refashioning of the English language. Through the novel’s unexpected events, Roy presents the melancholy predicament of untouchables as well as the struggle of a woman in pursuit of romantic love in a patriarchal society. In this analysis, I will demonstrate how the reader reacts to Roy’s art of storytelling and how her unconventional style illuminates the novel’s…

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    somebody on a particular issue. The developments in this paper entails a deep analysis of the novels Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World written by George Orwell and Aldous Huxley respectively. Additionally, more emphasis will be carried out on the issues relating to freedom, brainwashing, state, apathy and deception. While drawing a parallel between the universes presented in the modern world and the two novels, the research findings will also attempt to reveal the conceptions given…

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    The Scarlet Letter, an overview of the Puritans taken up and treated by Nathaniel Hawthorne The Scarlet letter is a Gothic Romantic novel written by Nathaniel Hawthorne in 1850. The novel is a historical fiction in a historical setting Puritan Massachusetts Bay Colony, of the 17th Century depicting a story of a woman named Hester Prynne who gives birth to an illegitimate child and her punishment for her sin. According to the views of Nathaniel Hawthorne on the Puritan society, he portrayed…

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    It is often said that change can affect your life in a whole other way. In Christopher Paul Curtis’s historical fictional novel, The Watsons Go to Birmingham 1963, the main character Kenny Watson goes to the dangerous and spooky Collier's Landing where no man has ever lived.The dynamic character Kenny Watson transforms after arriving in Birmingham. Kenny Watson’s change is so important to the novel because it shows that after an awful event, it can change someone’s perspective and how they see…

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    by making a cult of admirers who were known as “Janeites”. This cult was not the only memory people had of her; they also turned many of her novels into films. (Jane Austen’s biography) At the age of 41, Jane would start getting ill; she kept many efforts to keep writing but her conditions would soon become to severe. (Jane Austen) In 1817, she…

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    Fiction Novels and Their Impact On My Life
 As a child, giant books scared me, so watching my older brother finish an 800 page harry potter book in less than a day blew my little 8 year old mind. Since that historical moment in time, I have grown an addiction to fiction books. Watching a writer’s imagination come to life through ink on paper was amazing, and I strove to capture the same images in my own mind. The brilliant fiction novels I read when I was younger, the environment my brother and…

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    Although Margaret Mitchell wrote only one novel, she turned into an overall marvel coming to a great many perusers around the globe with her memorable novel Gone with the Wind. For this American Civil War-period novel, she won the National Book grant for Most Distinguished Novel in 1936 and the Pulitzer Prize in 1937. Gone with the wind set a business record of 50,000 duplicates in one day , one million in the initial six months and two million in the first year. The film, Gone with the Wind,…

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    Huckleberry Finn Analysis

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    American novel of all time. This book clearly broke many rules that society wasn’t ready for at it’s time, but by doing this it paved the way for much of the literature that followed after it. The main character Huckleberry Finn is caught telling the story through his eyes in first person narrative. Huckleberry carries great intentions but he is blind to a lot of the things that happens around him, no matter what; he always follows his first gut instinct which will surprise you in this novel.…

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    blame… everyone of us, excepting Fanny" (Austen, 174). Edward Said in Culture and Imperialism offers an excellent clarification for the 19th century English novels as an accomplice to Empire, while Tony Tanner reveals, in "Original Penguin Classics Introduction" of the novel itself, the using of symbolism towards the controlling ideas that the novel intended to…

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    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was a man of many contradictions and mystery. Though scientifically educated, he was a believer of fairies and stances. He believed in life beyond death and often rose above the logic of common man. A humanist who identified with oppressed people, and clearly expressed his anguish in his book The Crime of the Congo, a long pamphlet in which he denounced the horrors of that colony ad many such creations. His humanist nature was also seen in his book…

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