Brian Robeson, a 13-year-old from New York has boarded a bush plane directed towards Northern Canada to visit his father 1 month after his parent’s divorce. He only bears a hatchet that he received from his mother as a gift for the summer. The divorce is affecting his life as it plagues his thoughts, but a flying lesson taught by the pilot takes his mind off the divorce. While Brian is managing the plane the pilot starts to have pains all over his torso, the cause being a heart attack. Brian pilots the plane until his descent starts and Brian knows he won’t reach his destination and he attempts to land in a lake. After surviving the plane crash Brian is injured and has nothing to eat, but he locates a berry patch that contains berries that make him exceedingly sick. After coping with the pain he comes across a raspberry patch with a bear roaming…
The story “All the Broken Pieces” is about a twelve year old boy named Matt who is struggling from his nightmares. Matt is a Vietnamese child, his mother gave him away when he was 10. Matt is can not stop wondering why his mom gave him up and not his brother. He is also wondering when his American parents will go back to git his brother or give Matt back to his mother. Matt is trying to get through but is still trying to figure out whats going on. Matt joins a baseball team because he used to play back in Vietnam. There is a kid on his baseball team that Matt does not get along with because his brother was killed in the war from the Vietnamese people. The kids did not get along until their coach made them work together.…
Everyone at some point of their lives will experience a Chicxulub. Something that will change your entire life for the better or the worse. It’s what you choose to do with that change that will build your character. Take Maureen and Ted for example. Late, one rainy night, they get their Chicxulub. A call that delivered the heart-wrenching news of their daughter, Maddy’s accident.…
It’s a chilly fall night in London 1888. There is something strangely off, as the wind whistles through the dark and damp alley ways. London is a dark and dangerous place at night but Catherine Eddowes decides to take her chances in Whitechapel. She has heard the stories of young women being mutilated near the very streets she walks, but she thinks that could never happen to her. As she walks she can feel the hair on the back of her neck stand on end as if she is being watched. Faintly she can hear someone laughing maniacally. She moves more quickly as she hears the slightest sound of footsteps behind her. She begins to run as the footsteps get closer and closer. She whips around but no one is in sight as the fog obstructs her view. She breathes a sigh of relief, and turns back around. That is when she sees…
The state of humanity is a debatable topic, as it constantly has its ups and downs. For example, while humanity is moving forward in areas such as knowledge and technology, there are still many displays of ignorance and stupidity that make people wonder if progress is being made at all. Lorraine Hansberry, the praised playwright behind A Raisin in the Sun and The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, has experienced both the good and bad aspects of humanity and expresses it through her work. Although the majority of the characters and plot of A Raisin in the Sun suggest that humanity is repetitive, Hansberry uses some of her other characters,…
The climax of this book is when he becomes the "new Brian" after his suicide attempt when the plane flies overhead without noticing him. Brian learns the power of positive thinking. Initially, Brian's setbacks leave him frustrated, hopeless, and full of self-pity. He longs for home, focusing on the past rather than the future. Early in his stay in the woods, Brian recalls the words of his old English teacher Mr. Perpich. He constantly encouraged his students to think positively and to motivate themselves, saying, "You are all you have." This advice helps Brian to a certain extent, but he does not fully realize the import of positive thinking until a certain incident forces him to see it.…
The Pigman is a novel about two kids, John and Lorraine, and Mr. Pignati who is known as “The Pigman.” John and Lorraine are tenth graders and are very different people. John swears and drinks a lot, unlike Lorraine. Lorraine is a very sweet and caring person. One of John’s avocations is bombing the bathrooms at school. He is known as the bathroom bomber because he likes to just set them off at random times. John’s best friend is Norton, who is antagonistic and mundane in some ways. Also, he was an ingrate person. One day John and Lorraine were over at their friend's house calling random people. It was a game they played to see who could talk to a random person from the number directory the longest. It was Lorraine’s turn to pick someone to…
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn once said that “the battle line between good and evil runs through the heart of every man.” East of Eden is a novel written by twentieth century author John Steinbeck. The Viking Press published it in 1952. The narration takes place from 1862 to 1918, mostly in the Salinas Valley, although some episodes happen in Massachusetts and Connecticut. John Steinbeck's East of Eden depicts humanity's struggle between virtue and in as a perpetual narrative of human history. Cathy Ames, the most controversial character in the novel, seems to be the only person of the book incapable of good: she has the characteristics of a born moral monster. She is not. The events that took place in her childhood affected Cathy. We will then see…
The novel “Hatchet” is a piece of literature that is very descriptive about the trials and tribulations Brian walks through when the plane crashes and he is left alone. This novel talks about how Brian’s character evolves over the course of the novel from being an overwhelmed child to a self-reliant young adult. He mentally became stronger but also noticed his physical features changing. He learns adapt to the environment and to fight Mother Nature, to survive in the wilderness.…
Individuals with a strong support system encouraging them through challenging times commonly results in success. The belief people have in you won’t matter if you don’t believe in yourself. The difference in the two lives of the Wes Moores developed deeply from expectancies and the structure of support. The quote “Our roots help to determine our routes” (184) by Dr. Cornel West was symbolized in the novel The Other Wes Moore through the main character’s hardships, accomplishments, and conclusions.…
My book that i am reading is about this thirteen year old boy named Brian Robeson who is desperately trying to survive. He was on a plane that crashed in a Canadian wilderness and all he was to survive is what is in the survival backpack that was in the plane. There are only two main characters in the story and they are Brian himself and the hunter that found Brian and his name was David Smallhorn. The hunter lives on a small island on the lake.…
Do you know what's scary? Being stranded is, and do you know what is worse, being stranded on a block of ice or stranded alone on a mountain. After reading Hatchet and learning about Ernest Shackleton I learned a lot of new information about survival. I believe that some traits are particularly crucial for survival, and some really aren't. I think patience, observancy, and determination are some very important traits for survival.…
Throughout Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral,” the nameless narrator, the main character develops emotionally through a situation that creates fear in an already introverted man. He does not want to go outside of his comfort zone and he is caught off guard when he is forced beyond his current developmental state. But, through a lesson from the blind narrator finds himself enlightened to the sentiments of the handicapped.…
“The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” (H. P. Lovecraft). The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, is set in a controversial religious part of history that uses strict morals and disquietude to install panic of the unknown. In The Crucible, the reader can see that Abigail is a depraved, vengeful, manipulative, evil minded young girl who uses fear and spite to dictate the world around her. Using her vengeful and nasty, unforgiving past of witnessing her parents getting bashed in the head right next to her pillow helped her form a wall to hurt others before they hurt her. To be above everyone else at all times by using her evil mind, malicious words is how she sees success and safety in herself.…
“Writers provide glimpses of other worlds giving readers opportunities to reflect on their own world”. To what extended do you agree.…