Young-adult fiction

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    adulthood is long and perplexed, frequently revealing questions that can 't be answered. Amid the process of the adult world appears to be welcoming and free, yet just when we get to be individuals from a cold, real society can the delighted forgetfulness of adolescence be acknowledged and missed. The novel Catcher in the Rye investigates how adult life seems unpredictable and unimaginable to young people on the very edge of entering it. Through the hero Holden Caulfield, J.D. Salinger catches…

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    City by himself, he encounters and contemplates his life and the world around him. Holden’s inconsistency makes him neither a child nor adult, rather he is a confused, immature adolescent. Holden wants to be taken seriously like an adult. At the same time, he does not want the responsibilities that adulthood entails. Holden pursues aspects associated with the adult world such as sex and drinking, but is inexperienced. Holden longs to be respected…

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    and my new friend, who I will call Betty Boop, has really opened my eyes for my future. Betty Boop is truly an inspiring person who has touched my heart. For my last journal, I am going to talk about chapters eight through fourteen in my textbook, Adult Development and Aging by John Cavanaugh and Fredda Blanchard-Fields. First, I asked Betty Boop if she has met her personal goals over the years. She had to stop and think about this as we were at the bowling alley having a good time. After…

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    His memory of Jane cannot transform Sunny into a virgin and the purity of Phoebe cannot stop the inevitable passing of time, Holden will become an adult. One might contend, however, that Holden’s stronghold onto childhood innocence, is not necessarily as bad as conforming. On account of said obsession to preserve his own childlike nature as well as that of others, he wishes to be "the catcher in the…

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    Holden strives for adulthood but at the same time being unable to truly escape his naive childhood. In the end, he has escaped the bonds of childhood but has not yet found himself become a true adult. Holden’s struggles between getting to the adult world and staying in the child realm of life are shown through adult behavior, lies, and his mindset…

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    references to his own past, Alice’s change in size, and imagery to show that people can keep elements of childhood, like imagination, forever. It is well known and quite obvious that childhood only lasts for a short amount of time before becoming an adult. It is not easy to let go of farcical games in the front yard of…

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    ranch owner or a writer, I had many phases. Conversely, if you asked me that question now that I am seventeen years old, the only answer I’d give you would be a shrug of shoulders. How come now, that I am only a few months away from becoming a legal adult, I have no idea what I want to do with my life? One of the main purposes of school is to help us understand the “real world”, and how to live in it. For instance; how to file taxes, how to compose a proper resume for…

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    Sanths 2 Main conflict Ed is a 19 year old that feels has not done anything prospective or good for himself and is searching to change; this is the main conflict of I am the Messenger. Ed expresses that he has having no achievements and no goals in life until he begins to get distracted by a game of cards that take him on new adventures leading him to ultimately overcome his dissatisfaction with life. The reader can notice the struggle the main character is going through during the rising…

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    Eveline demonstrates the outcome of a child having lost many loved ones through death or through them leaving her. This causes her to fear change. In the short story "Eveline" James Joyce reveals that the old field symbolizes Eveline 's premature jump into adulthood, the dusty, monotonous house represents her life in the moment and Frank symbolizes a coming change in Eveline 's life, showing Eveline 's deep-rooted fear of change and unwillingness to accept it. The field represents Eveline and…

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    fall between the neediness of childhood and the responsibility of adulthood, not quite fitting into either category. Eighteen year olds, in legal terms, are adults but in society’s standards they still must wait a few more years before fully enjoying what adult life has to offer. Does that mean they still do not have the full maturity of an ‘adult’? Every person achieves a different level of maturity at some point in his or her life therefore, measuring maturity depends on the social, mental,…

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