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    Sonny's Blues Themes

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    Impacts of Place The places that make up a day to day life are surprisingly consistent. Many hours are spent at school, work, and home. Perhaps a library or store. And yet, despite the routine of the everyday life, a remarkable amount of information can be discovered using the objects found in a home or the route taken on the way to work. Because authors create specific settings specifically to mold their characters’ viewpoints, this same focus on place is magnified in fictional works. The…

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    He was French catholic in background, as was Kate. After their marriage they lived in New Orleans. Before their first decade, they had five boys and two girls. Oscar failed in his business; therefore they were forced to move to his old home in a small Louisiana parish. Her life in Louisiana affected her writings late. One of the main conflicts in this time was the conflict between the whites and the blacks, and the racial issues. She depicted this conflict in her short story “Desiree's Baby”.…

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    Fiction Essay Nobel Prize winner William Faulkner said that a writer must “leave no room in his workshop for anything but the old verities and truths of the heart, the old universal truths lacking with any story is ephemeral and doomed- love and honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice.” Flannery O’Connor uses these universal truths in her short story, A Good Man Is Hard to Find. An old southern woman trying to come to terms with the new culture of the south dooms her family by…

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    Through his sacrifice the cost and privilege of living can be measured, just as Christians can see the true cost and privilege of life through Jesus Christ's sacrifice. <br> <br>Dr. Manette also sacrificed much of his life by giving up his own personal goals and agenda for Lucie. On page 125 Dr. Manette says, "any fancies, any reasons, and apprehensions, anything whatsoever, new or old against the man she really loved…they shall all be obliterated for her sake." Dr. Manette was…

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    Independence, or the freedom from control, influence, support, aid, or the like, of others, “is the most important quality that a reader can possess.” (Woolf) Having this ability gives the reader the freedom to make their own connections or interpretations of the story. Every person will have their own unique thoughts and ideas on the book, so “nothing can be more fatal then to be guided by the preferences of others in a matter so personal.” (Woolf) This is why independence is so vital to the…

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    The New Girl by Marc Mitchell In this essay I will write a brief summary of the short story “The New Girl”, written by Marc Mitchell, an author from Florence, Alabama. I will continue by characterizing the narrator and discuss the reasoning behind Allison’s behaviour and narrator’s response (which will be included in his characterisation). The story takes place on Prospect Street, a white, lower-middle-class neighbourhood, where there are old houses aplenty. It’s a hot, bright day, and…

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    However its the words that follows these that is satirical. »When they are present.« Twain is say only to obey your parents only when they are around. So when you're on your own, at school, outside, where ever, you don't have to obey your parents. »Be respectful to your superiors, if you have any, also to strangers, and sometimes to others.« An example Twain uses is, if a person offends you and you're not sure whether they did it intentionaly or not, don't resort to extreme measures trying to…

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    Many interesting points and ideas are discussed in Flannery O’Connor’s essay “The Element of Suspense in ‘A Good Man is Hard to Find’”. These ideas are not only concurrent with O’Connor’s short story “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, but they can also be broadened and applied to all aspects of literature. O’Connor’s primary theory; one that I believe is prevalent not only in writing, but in everyday life, states that violence is the only thing capable of bringing a person back to reality, it is the…

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    "The Lesson" by Toni Cade Bambara is a spirited story about a poor girl out of place in an expensive toy store (F.A.O Schwartz); it is a social commentary. The descriptions of Harlem and the characters in the story are very realistic and vivid. The reader can imagine the smell of the city air, hear the traffic, and picture the characters "The Lesson" is a story about one African-American girl 's struggle with her growing awareness of class inequality. There are three main themes readily…

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    ‘Greasy Lake’ In the story, T.C Boyle introduces a group of high school boys in their adolescence. Adolescence is a stage in one’s life that marks the transition from childhood to adulthood. It is a point where one becomes rebellious and curious, with a desire to resist or go against authority and eager to discover new things. At this stage, teenagers mostly engage indecent behaviors such as; drinking alcohol, substance abuse, and sexual activities. This stage is the most crucial as it shapes up…

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