In stories of all kinds, a common theme is “choices”. Choosing what to do with your life, choosing who you want to be with, choosing to defy stereotypes and doing things nobody would expect you to do. In our English course this year, we have read the story Everyone Talked Loudly in Chinatown and watched the film Into the Wild, both of which deal with important choices in life. In Everyone Talked Loudly in Chinatown, we meet Lin. She is originally Chinese, but lives in Canada. Her life seems perfectly normal. She lives with her parents and her grandmother, and she goes to school where she has friends, a boyfriend and basically everything you are expected to have in high school. Her choice in the story is figuring out where she belongs. Does she belong with her Chinese heritage, or in her Canadian home? The most important point in this story is the grandmother. From the beginning, she is very ill and bedridden, and has to be taken care of. Lin hates feeding her grandmother, but feels that she has to. Her mother can do it sometimes, but it’s mostly Lin’s responsibility. At the end of the story, she wakes up in the middle of the night and goes to her grandmother for comfort, only to find that she is not breathing. The grandmother in this story symbolises Lin’s Chinese heritage. She is not very fond of taking …show more content…
No house, no car, no money. He runs away from home with only a few dollars in his pocket and the clothes he is wearing, and he drives as far as he can before his car breaks down and then keeps walking. His goal is to get to Alaska: to live in the forest, to hunt his own food and to survive by himself, without any other people to help him. He leaves his family behind and only sends a letter when he knows his family can’t follow him before he’s long gone. He does not want to be found by anyone, and he does not want anyone to worry about
Choices, the story writen by Susan Kerslake is about how the choices that we make everyday affect who we are and how our life can change by making the wrong decission. But is it always a bad decission? is it always our fault?
Ready Player One hits some of the same situations as in the holocaust or for the book that we read “Night” like taking people spread out over a good area and combining them into a small dense area. They both also touch on the topic of how when someone is killed or something is blown up now one raises an eyebrow or if they do no one does anything about it.
Our Life is a matter of choices. Live well and have faith and it will never go wrong. Our lives can be full of crazy ups and downs that shape our views on how life should be lived. With a similar ideology, author Flannery O’Connor’s depicts her own life struggles using different aspects and details throughout her novels and short stories. O’Connor lived by the basis that life must go on no matter the hardships. In her novels she represented various characters who made wrong choices and due to those choices suffered extreme negative consequences. Despite her struggles, O’Connor made the choice to continue on in her life yet many of her novels contradicted that same idea by having characters in her novels and short stories suffer consequences for making the wrong choices. Because the
Brave New World Bernard Marx is an intelligent Alpha-Plus who was threated to be exiled to Iceland for acting out and threatening stability. As the book unfolds we learn more and more about the true rebellious and independent man. Bernard’s character in Brave New World reflects a person that is constantly going against the rest of society’s views and ideas and thriving for freedom and individuality. Following the earlier threat of being sent to Iceland in chapter 10, later in chapter 16, Bernard and his acquaintance, Helmholtz, are officially exiled to Falkland Islands by Mustapha Mond.
Hammond states this to Dr. Wu in the chapter, Bungalow. In this quote Hammond refuses to face the reality of how unsafe his park is, even though countless amount of evidence is set in front him. Not to mention he also refuses to believe that the dinosaurs have found a way to breed despite of the scientists’ precautions. Between his stubbornness and old age we observe that Hammond is actually out of his mind. Later on, after the island is in pieces and most of the staff is dead, Hammond still believes that he still/should build another Jurassic Park. Though in the beginning the novel vilified Nerdy, Hammond emerges as the real villain of the story with his abuse of the scientific power. This quote helps you understand who the real protagonist and real antagonist are. Nerdy was just a pod in the author’s game, to figure whose fault is. (Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton. Chapter Bungalow)
We have all been in a situation where we have immigrated to a new country for different reasons regarding, better future, or education. In the book Jade of Peony, Wayson Choy describes a struggle of a Chinese family as they settle in Canada, with their new generation of kids born here, the family struggles to keep their children tied to their Chinese customs and traditions as they fit in this new country. The Chinese culture needs to be more open minded as it limits the future generation’s potential. Chinese culture limitations are seen through the relationship expectations, education, gender roles and jobs.
In this chapter it talks about how Mr. McCandless had stopped traveling for quite a period of a time to be precise he spent a little over two months in one place, Bullhead city this however happened to be the longest time Mr. McCandless ever ‘settled down.’ In the excerpt The dominant primordial beast was strong in Buck, and under the fierce conditions of trail life it grew and grew. Yet it was a Secret growth. His newborn cunning gave him poise and control. It bears relevance to this chapter because it describes Chris McCandless as he was ‘charging up’ for his next big adventure and try to save up some money for the big trip to Alaska,
In the play, Inherit the Wind by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, the character of Bertram Cates causes the most amount of conflict and impact on his society. He teaches about evolution, so he starts the heated argument on his punishment, and how he impacted the people with his actions
In the poem “Choices” by Allen Steble and the book Scorpions by Walter Dean Myers a common theme was presented. Throughout the poem “Choices”, it was explaining that everyone was a choice in life to do what they want. In the book Scorpions, Jamal is a twelve year old boy growing up in Harlem, his brother is in jail for murder, everywhere Jamal goes he seems to get into some sort of trouble. He is bullied at school by a bigger boy, labeled by his teacher as trouble maker and his brother tells his gang that Jamal needs to be the leader of the Scorpion gang. Jamal and his best friend Tito are later found in a dangerous situation. The theme of “Choices” and Scorpions are related. A common theme between these two is making decisions.
Lindo was arranged to marry Tyan-yu. While the marriage was short-lived, Tyan-yu constantly lied to Lindo, and Tyan-yu’s mother treated Lindo like an object to be bartered between families. Lindo experiences depression being trapped in this lifestyle, so she decides to flee to America in order to escape it. When reminiscing on her marriage Lindo says, “I had no choice, now or later. That was how backward families in the country were. We were always the last to give up stupid old-fashioned customs” (Tan ). Similar to the mother in the beginning, Tan creates appeal to pathos, forcing the reader to sympathize with Lindo. The reader’s sympathy to Lindo allows Tan to expand on the larger issue of sexism, creating an emotional and educational tone in order to coax the reader into, again, understanding the true scale of sexism. Tan drilling this larger idea of sexism into readers changes the reader’s perspective. With new perspective, readers notice the need for change to establish equality between both sexes. Therefore, Tan is using her writing as a tool for a deeper subject: exciting change within the world, and thus, exemplifying Jong’s words.
The first and main time Cole acts up in this story is when he beats up Peter Driscal for telling on him that he broke into a hardware store. He beat up Peter so badly that he had speech slur ever since. That was the worst time he had acted up, but there were many other times. Second, whenever Garvey is trying to teach him a lesson with ingredients for a cake, and Cole got so mad and swiped his arm across the table knocking off all of the ingredients to the floor. Cole usually acts up when he knows he’s wrong, when he is afraid, or when something isn’t afraid of him. He is afraid of the Spirit Bear, so he wants to kill it so he doesn’t have to be afraid anymore. In the book it says “He flung the spear with all his strength, fully intending to kill” (Mikaelsen 77). Those are some examples of how Cole gets violent at the start of the book.
Lindo’s upbringing was significant because her family was very traditional. As a result of her family abiding by tradition, Lindo was betrothed to Tyan-yu as a young girl. Lindo’s family treated her as if she was from a different family. When Lindo’s family lost everything in a flood, her father decided to move the family to Wushi. Lindo was old enough to move in with Tyan-yu’s family, so her family left her in Taiyuan with her future in-laws. When Lindo moved in with her new in-laws, Huang Taitai immediately put Lindo to work cooking, cleaning, and sewing. Lindo not only lost her family by moving in with the Huangs; she also lost her childhood innocence since she was forced to abandon playing with other children so she could be put to work. As a child, Lindo faced adversity due to her lack of American opportunities and therefore matured quickly.
Choices, they change us as humans and can greatly affect our lives. There is a book that showcases this completely describes this perfectly, this book is Tangerine. In the book Tangerine, many choices are made by the main character, his friends and his family that affects what happens and other people's feelings. Choices, even small ones can change lives.
Chris McCandless had this crazy idea that he would hitchhike to Alaska from his hometown of El Segundo, California. In April 1992, Chris decided to start his long and dangerous journey. For anyone, it is dangerous enough to hitchhike to Alaska with the proper equipment such as money, clothes, food, etc. McCandless decided that he was gonna go with nothing. Before his adventure began, he had given $25,000 in savings to charity. He started his journey with a car, his favorite yellow Datsun. He had drove the car through Arizona, California, and South Dakota before his car was disabled by a flash flood. From that point on he was on foot.
Providing the two heroines with strong and engaging personalities, the novel portrays the life of two young Chinese girls, who because of historical events and family secrets, have to grow up faster than what they had planned. The book delivers emotional themes that are powerful yet familiar, and is written in a compelling manner.