Preview

The Downfall of Man: One Cannot Live Without Love

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1561 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Downfall of Man: One Cannot Live Without Love
Appreciation of the book: While I cannot say that I had an easy time reading Under the Volcano, I can say that it was an enjoyable experience. The book is laid out in 12 chapters of similar length that progress the story in a pleasant fashion. I very much enjoyed the character development and their interactions with each other. It was easy to care about the characters and their issues. The way Lowry depicts Mexico truly emphasizes the sense of despair and darkness that surrounds this novel. While Mexico is usually a sunny and festive place, it is not quite the case of this novel. If I had a critique on the book, it would be the heavy use of Spanish in the dialogues. I cannot read Spanish and while it is possible to make out some of the meaning of the conversation due to the resemblances of French, English and Spanish, it is still annoying not being able to know what exactly the characters are saying. I also found a few chapters being a bit bland and uneventful like Chapter 6 where we get an inside view on Hugh’s past which I did not particularly care for. Aside from this, I found the novel being very engaging.
The Downfall of a Man: One cannot live without love.
Malcolm Lowry’s Under the Volcano is an impressive novel in every sense of the term. Be it by its unique writing style or by the towering amount of cultural references included in every line of text, this book demands the full attention of its reader. Throughout this complex piece of literature, Lowry has been able to depict a simple event: the downfall of a man into the depths of hell. In contrast to the past two books we have read; A portrait of the Artist and The Waves, Lowry’s book takes place in less than a day. However, we are presented with years of different events that put into context the predicament in which the Consul finds himself in. The first flashback introduces us with the Consul’s past as a naval lieutenant and the events of the First World War in which he captured and destroyed a German

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    I enjoyed some parts of the book, as the stories were interesting to read about. Alejandro is relatable to many boys in his age group because of his imagination and maybe not being accepted by everyone around him. There were cons to the book as well. The Spanish is fairly simple in the first few chapters, but it becomes increasingly hard throughout the book, and I was forced to sit with a Spanish dictionary guessing definitions and spending long amounts of time looking words…

    • 305 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    My Opinion: I would say this book is very well written it gives very good detail of all the characters and the setting. When reading it you can clearly picture what is going on and where it is going…

    • 297 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In chapter 15, Vivian, Grants girlfriend, says she hopes Grant’s family will like her. She comes from a mulatto-community called Free LaCove. Vivian is married to a very dark-skinned man whom she met while attending Xavier University. Vivian kept her marriage a secret from her family because she knew her family will object. When she told her family they all avoided her.…

    • 158 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    F. Scott Fitzgerald’s introduction of chapter two contains a vivid description of the dull and banal city of the Valley of Ashes. He illustrates that the area is riddled with “ashes” that seep into the homes due to the severe pollution. In addition, the tainted land turns the inhabitants into lifeless ghosts who “move dimly and [are] crumbling through the powdery air.” Furthermore, the “gray cars crawl” through the tracks emitting a “ghastly creak.” Fitzgerald’s eloquent characterization serves the purpose to introduce the banal life of George Wilson; his somber diction creates a sense of desolation in the ambiance of the chapter. Moreover, George is described as a “spiritless man” to show that the Valley of Ashes rescinds the life out of…

    • 162 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This novella is on the surface a gripping thriller; but if you delve deeper into the metaphorical and allegorical meanings then you will find an entirely different story, unlike most other stories from that period.…

    • 1404 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Holocaust Book Report

    • 1860 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Hochschild describes grisly details in a way just gruesome enough to make one appalled, but never disturbed. His writing style could easily be described as wordy, and he has an affinity for long, complex sentences. That said, his writing is never too confusing to understand, and it leaves the reader feeling knowledgeable about the topic. The most distinctive part about the book, Hochschild’s detailed examination of the cast of historical characters, is its key to both success and downfall. On one hand, the descriptions give life to unknown historical figures and make them round and dynamic, helping the book read like a fictitious novel. On the other hand, however, the lengthy descriptions occur at random points throughout the book, pulling readers out of the plot and leaving them confused upon their return to the action of the story. Overall, however, Hochschild does an excellent job of translating a dark, historical subject into a readable, interesting…

    • 1860 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Within the works of William Shakespeare’s Othello, Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein the concept of love is found within characters that are innocent and filled with good intentions. In all three works, love fills specified characters with joy and gratefulness towards the other characters who they claim to love. Unfortunately, the characters that experience love are only satisfied with its graces until it somehow gets corrupted. The minds of the victimized characters are filled with anger, hatred, and some with the idea of vengeance. Corruption of love within Othello, Dracula, and Frankenstein come with causes and effects. In the two works Frankenstein and Othello, both Frankenstein’s creation and Othello were in love. The creature was in love with the cottagers and Othello was in love with Desdemona. When being presented with evidence to no longer feel love towards the people they claim to admire- it causes them to hate. The corruption in the relationships of Jonathan Harker from Dracula and Victor Frankenstein from the novel Frankenstein is primarily caused by the supernatural beings working against them. Frankenstein’s love (Elizabeth) is murdered by the beast he creates, and Jonathan’s love (Mina) was corrupted when she is bitten by Dracula. The effect of love being corrupted in the works Frankenstein and Dracula results with the characters to seek revenge and to stop Frankenstein’s creature and Dracula from causing more pain to humanity. As a result of the characters Othello and the monster created by Frankenstein having their love corrupted, they murder the people who they see as the motivation for all of their actions. Once these characters come to a realization of their mistakes, it is too late and they commit suicide. Thus the works of William Shakespeare’s Othello, Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein all…

    • 1996 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    This story is a touching momentum of a man’s penetrating awakening that he no longer has to suffer from the emotional torment that was inflicted upon him during his childhood. Rolf, “like a flower sinking into the mud” (367) has sank into himself; a self that is magnetized with cataclysmic devastation and desolation. The volcano has erupted to bring an avalanche of despair, so does this same volcano explode, bursting to eventually bring calm and equanimity. Isabell Allende has Rolf Carle, a news reporter fly out to the devastating scene where you are introduced to Azucena, a young girl, stuck in the mud. Rolfe Carle stays with Azucena in hopes of saving her from this catastrophe but in the meantime, he journeys through his repressed childhood memories.…

    • 1107 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    What I like about this novel is that it’s not like a novel that I have read before. I first want to remark that I like the time frame of the novel taking place during the Second World War and in the setting of New Mexico. I enjoy how the novel begins about a young boy who is conflicted with the pressures of parent opposed expectations. Needless to say, Antonio the main character has to grow up to be a man on his own without some kind of guidance from brothers who are away at war during the early chapters. However I like how Ultima becomes a mentor and supporting important character in his life. I also like some of the characters introduced throughout the novel such as of course Ultima, but also Narcisco. Although my enjoyment of the friendly…

    • 296 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the short story “Volcano” (2012), Lawrence Osborne argues the volcano parallels the life of the main character Martha. Osborne uses detail, emotion, and symbolism to support his claim.…

    • 607 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Failing to Love

    • 1387 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In her story “Never Marry a Mexican” Sandra Cisneros introduces the reader to the complex issues surrounding the racial and sexual identity of a Mexican-American woman living in the United States. The story is about a Chicana woman and how she seeks revenge on a white lover who has rejected her by becoming the sexual tutor of his teenage son. Cisneros give life to the protagonist Clemencia and paints her as a character in a modern day to demonstrate the pervasive negative impact on Mexican-American women, especially on Chicanas residing within the United States. Clemencia, the protagonist of the story, thinks “Drew, remember when you used to call me your Malinalli? It was a joke, a private game between us, because you looked like a Cortes with that beard of yours. My dark skin against yours…My Malinalli, Malinche, my courtesan, you said, and yanked my head back by the braid” (192). Clemencia is a painter, but she must support herself in other ways too. She sometimes acts as a translator; however for Clemencia Spanish is now the “native” language. In this discussion of her occupation, Clemencia pronounces “any way you look at it, what I do to make a living is a form of prostitution” (181). She feels as though when she is not painting she merely sells herself to make a living, much like La Malinche had to do in her relationship with Cortes. Clemencia constantly allows herself to fall in love with unavailable men who are always married and always white. This pattern results from her mother’s constant advice, “Never Marry a Mexican”. Clemencia’s mother, a lower-class Chicana woman from the United States who married an upper-class Mexican man, felt inescapable discrimination by both her husband’s upper-class family and mainstream U.S. society for her dark skin color. Her answer to this was to marry out, and supposedly up, by divorcing Clemencia’s father and marrying a white man. It is because of this example that Clemencia never sees Mexican men as…

    • 1387 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The movie “When A Man Loves A Woman” is an extremely powerful reflective movie regarding the affects of drug addiction on an individual as well as the destruction of the family unit. I would have to say that this movie is one of my all-time favorite movies. Has been and always will be. From the moment I had seen the movie when it aired on the big screen in 1994. It was most pivotal at that time since I have dealt with an individual whom was an alcoholic. I cannot recall even to date how many times I have seen this movie but what I can state is that being an addict in recovery myself from alcohol addiction, each and every time I see this movie, a new outlook or concept is gained from seeing the movie. I used to think this may have been due to wearing “rose colored” glasses with regard to addiction. After re-thinking that thought, I would suffice to say that the reasoning behind the differences each time after viewing the movie, it would be due more to the fact that as I progress deeper into my own recovery time, I am learning and growing. I am beginning to understand the thinking and feelings of an alcoholic. I have had to get “real” with myself and others and the more I am able to practice that along with the twelve steps my thoughts will be broadened.…

    • 2152 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Satire on Love

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Love is a very complex emotion. People everywhere search for it, but some never find love. It is a very coveted thing. Many are willing to do whatever it takes in order to obtain it. In the end, love is said to bring true happiness. If finding love really brings true happiness, it sounds like a lot of unhappiness to get through.…

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The play, ‘Romeo and Juliet’ by William Shakespeare and the novel, ‘Pride and Prejudice’,1813, by Jane Austen, both have the same concepts of love and that a rather negative perspective on love is that the costs may outweigh the rewards. In both texts, they demonstrate the limitations that prevent them from being together. In ‘Romeo and Juliet’, the idea of the opposing families, the pressures of society, the use of violent acts and language is ultimately what prevents the star-crossed lovers from being together is very similar. Both Shakespeare and Austen use a variety of literary techniques to convey the idea that the costs of love may outweigh the rewards.…

    • 1106 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After reading this short tale of two men in college, and one not-so-bright college girl, I have learned many things about fallacies. In our powerpoint presentation, it says that each generation is to learn these fallacies. This tale of the college students and the teaching of fallacies was in a much different generation than we are in now. Some fallacies I learned of in this story that were different from the ones stated in my course text were, Dicto Simpliciter, Contradictory Premises, Ad Misericoriam, Hypothesis Contrary to Fact, and Poisoning the Well.…

    • 338 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics