Report on An Abundance of Katherines, by John Green (215). An Abundance of Katherines is about Colin Singleton, a smart high school graduate from Chicago, as he mourns and tries to get his life figured out after being broken up with by his nineteenth girlfriend named Katherine. In addition to his girlfriend calling off their relationship, he is forced to come to terms with the fact that he is now an adult and no longer the special and prodigious child that he had been all his life. To assist him out of his rut, his best friend, Hassan, decides to accompany him on a summer road trip. Without a set destination, the two friends set off on the road, with the goal to drive until Colin feels at ease with his current situation. While on the road, the two friends stop whenever they need to, whether it be to get food or to stop at attractions. A stop that is worth mentioning would be the final resting place of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, which is located in a small town in Tennessee. While on a tour to see the resting spot, Colin and Hassan meet Lindsey, a tour guide and convenience store employee who is around their age, and the three become friends. Eventually, Colin and Hassan …show more content…
Despite not being able to hunt because of his religion, Hassan takes the outing very seriously. While the two are waiting for some action, Colin decides to call Katherine III and finds out that he actually broke up with her. Hassan and Colin end up being discovered by a hog. Colin tries to shoot it, but misses and shoots a hornets’ nest instead. As they escape the forest, Hassan sees that Katrina is cheating with him with The Other Colin, who is currently dating Lindsey. Colin and Hassan record the confession. Upon hearing the confessing, Lindsey demands that TOC leaves her alone. When she resists his please, he gets physical. To stop him, Colin, Hassan and Lindsey’s friends try to fight him off. The effort proves futile as they all end up
after removing the chip from the back of her phone, she hunts down and tracks her alt. After following her alt into an alley, she sees that her alt hired a striker to kill her. She gets shot in the left shoulder and only narrowly escapes thanks to chord scaring them off. After Chord patches up her shoulder, she runs away from him again, but this time, she goes to another striker job. After killing the target, she finds an empty room and sleeps there for a while until her alt’s striker found her and tried to get the jump on her. After getting outsmarted by West, she kills him and runs away to her alt’s house. When she gets there, she finds out that the striker that she killed was her alt’s boyfriend and that the next day, her alt was going to attack Chord. She immediately runs to chord’s house and tells him about her alt’s plans, only to find that he knew all along. The next morning she gives him sleeping pills and sets up a trap for her alt to fall into. When she arrives at Chord’s house, she shoots and misses by a fraction of an inch. She runs over to Chord’s house, after leaving him
From Willa, With Love by Coleen Murtagh Paratore is told through the eyes of a young teenage girl, Willa, who helps her mother, Stella, and her stepfather, Sam run their popular business, the Bramblebriar Inn. It’s August time in Bramble, on Cape Cod, Massachusetts and Willa is enjoying her summer. She tries to keep herself busy to keep the thought of missing her dreamy boyfriend, JFK as she calls him, who is away for six weeks at a baseball camp and her best friend, Mariel, who is visiting her mother for the summer. To fill up her schedule she helps her mother plan weddings at the inn, spends time getting to know her newly discover half brother, Will, who is visiting, takes walks along the beach with her dog, Salty, and reads tons of books.
My Life With the Walter Boys by Ali Novak is novel about a young girl named Jackie. Jackie’s family died in a car accident and her uncle can’t take care of her, so she moves to Colorado with a family friend. This family friend just so happens to raise one girl, who acts like a boy, and eleven other boys. She falls in love with Cole, one of the boys that lives there but tries her hardest not to show it.
This book takes place all throughout America as Duff, the main character, drives from his hometown to the other side of the country in California. Duff has recently been given a job offer in Silicon Valley. Duff is ready to go and is willing to, his parents, on the other hand say that instead of diving straight into a job, Duff should go to college instead. Duff argues that he will get paid a large amount of money and will be working on something he loves. His parents give in and Duff sets off to drive across America. Of course, for Duff, nothing goes as planned. After the first 100 or so miles,
Katherine Dunham was born in Chicago, Illinois on June 22, 1909 as the youngest child of Albert Millard Dunham and Fanny June (Guillaume), with an older brother, Albert Jr., as well as children from her mother’s first marriage. Her heritage included Indian, French Canadian, English, Malagasy (Madagascan) and African ancestry (Aschenbrenner 7). Dunham’s mother passed away when Katherine was only four and their father left the children with their aunt Lulu, where Katherine faced multiple instances of prejudice as African Americans were flooding North at this time (Aschenbrenner 8). These early experiences of prejudice and as a go between in her aunt Lulu’s custody battle for Dunham and her brother played a large role her approach between
The central narrative of My Antonia could be a check upon the interests, and tho' in his fib Jim seldom says something directly concerning the concept of the past, the general tone of the novel is very unhappy. Jim’s motive for writing his story is to do to change some association between his gift as a high-powered any professional person and his nonexistent past on the NE grassland ; in re-creating that past, the novel represent each Jim’s retention and his feelings concerning his recollections. in addition, inside the narrative itself, persona usually look rachis yearningly toward the past that they need losing, particularly when Book I. Life in blackness Hawk, Jim and Ántonia recall their Day on the farm Lena appearance back toward her spirit together with her family; the Shimerdas and therefore the Russian mirror on their lives in their several home countries before they immigrated to the United Country .
In “A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson,” Mary Rowlandson, a Puritan mother from Lancaster, Massachusetts, recounts the invasion of her town by Indians in 1676 during “King Philip’s War,” when the Indians attempted to regain their tribal lands. She describes the period of time where she is held under captivity by the Indians, and the dire circumstances under which she lives. During these terrible weeks, Mary Rowlandson deals with the death of her youngest child, the absence of her Christian family and friends, the terrible conditions that she must survive, and her struggle to maintain her faith in God. She also learns how to cope with the
Whether one would like to admit it or not, change is a difficult and not to mention uncomfortable experience which we all must endure at one point in our lives. A concept that everyone must understand is that change does not occur immediately, for it happens overtime. It is necessary for time to pass in order for a change to occur, be it days, weeks, months, or even years. The main character, who is also the narrator of “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, realizing that “things felt less foreign in the dark” (Russell 225), knows that she will be subject to change very soon. The author makes it evident to readers that the narrator is in a brand new environment as the story begins. This strange short story about girls raised by
“Go within everyday and find the inner strength so that the world will not blow your candle out” (A Quote by Katherine Dunham 1). Once one of the most successful dancers in both American and European theater, Katherine Dunham, a dancer, anthropologist,social activist,and educator, continues to inspire people throughout the world. Named America’s irreplaceable Dance Treasure in 2000. Dunham remains a name heard regularly in dance schools across the world (“Katherine Dunham Biography” 4). She is known for always trying to make a difference and in the process she has become of the world’s greatest humanitarians (Osumare 5). Katherine Dunham’s work in African American rights in the dance world and her creation of new styles of dance makes her an important figure in American dance History.
Throughout My Antonia, the difference between immigrants and native lifestyles are shown. While neither Jim not Antonia is rich, Jim is definitely more well off than her. He knows the language and has enough that he can have more opportunities. Antonia realizes that her life is going to be more difficult and that she will have to work more because of her mother’s decision to move to America. She tells Jim that “if I live here, like you, that is different. Things will be easy for you. But they will be hard for us,” (90) and knows that her gentle personality might be at stake. This also foreshadows future events where Antonia struggles as an immigrant farmer. It adds obstacles to her life which might lead to them drifting apart in their friendship, even complete separation. This relates to the world in how immigrants had a harder time getting going in life. Antonia’s mother has already become changed because of poverty. She is grasping, selfish, and believes everyone should help her family. Jim’s grandmother defends her, knowing that, “a body never knows what traits poverty might bring out in them,” (60), though it is socially unacceptable. The pressures of helping her family led Antonia to not be educated and become a farmer. She is happy, but this leads to Jim being away, “twenty years before I kept my promise,” (211) as he is a successful lawyer and travels. They still have old connections, though being from Bohemia did change Antonia’s life and where it could have gone.
The Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson reveals that the ghastly depiction of the Indian religion (or what Rowlandson perceives as a lack of religion) in the narrative is directly related to the ideologies of her Puritan upbringing. Furthermore, Rowlandson's experiences in captivity and encounter with the new, or "Other" religion of the Indians cause her rethink, and question her past; her experiences do not however cause her to redirect her life or change her ideals in any way.
The Pressure to Assimilate in Mary Rowlandson’s A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson
Throughout the semester we have discussed a few captivity narratives such as: John Smith, Mary Rowlandson, and Cotton Mather. From a personal standpoint, Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative was one of the best selections we have read in class thus far. It is a prominent source of biblical encouragement to those of the Puritan religion and some other religions that put God above all human and nature. Throughout the short story, a Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mary Rowlandson, it describes the eleven weeks, approximately around eighty two days, were Rowlandson was held captive. Rowlandson demonstrates how strong her faith is throughout the entire time she was gone away from her family, losing her daughter Sarah and the problems she and the other captives had to face during that amount of time. She keeps her faith through the Lord and he delivers her prays in the end, because she stayed faithful to him.
In the book Diary Of A Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul, written by Jeff Kinney, Greg is being dragged through the country in an uncomfortable car for a road trip. In this fiction book, Greg is on a long road trip because his mom looked through a summer fun magazine and saw things to do in it and she chose the road trip option. Of course, Greg and the rest of the family was not thrilled by this idea. The three topics addressed in this book are the protagonist, conflict, and characterization.
Katherine Mansfield was born October 14, 1888 in Wellington New Zealand. Mansfield was a well-known and respected prominent writer in the 20th century. She attended Queens College in London with her sisters. Mansfield broke barriers for female writers in the early 20th century and even still today. Her stories commonly focus on the theme of reality /world versus human nature while also touching the themes of the darker and more complex sides of life.