Reveling in Reading Eve and The City of Ember by Claire O'Donoghue The City of Ember and Eve are two novels written for a teenage audience that contain the common theme of adolescent existence. This theme can be investigated by looking at hope, love and questioning authority. In this way Eve will be seen as the preferred book. In The City of Ember, the hope of all of the citizens, including the two main characters, Lina and Doon, have the hope that there is an alternative place to live. This can be seen in the quote, "What were you looking for?" Lina asked […] Sadge stared at her. He seemed to puzzle over her question. Finally he said, "I was looking for something that could help us… Like a stairway that leads somewhere, maybe" (p. 69-72). …show more content…
Eve runs away from school as she realises her role will be to produce babies for the new city. She slowly learns that men aren’t as bad as she was led to believe and ends up falling in love with the character, Caleb. “I had worked so hard at school, taken detailed notes on each lesson, scribbling down the margins until my fingers cramped. And for what? To fill my head with lies” (p. 142). This quote by Eve, came after a discussion with Caleb about a book that she had studied at school. Caleb pointed the true meaning of the book and she realized how much of her childhood a lie was. In The City of Ember the theme of questioning authority is not quite as strong as there are no laws preventing people from escaping. Lina and Doon discover that the Mayor is stealing food and not looking for a way out of the crumbing city. Doon makes the following comment after seeing the Mayor in a secret room asleep surrounded by food, “that’s the solution he keeps telling us about. It’s a solution for him, not the rest of us. He gets everything he needs, and we get the leftovers! He doesn’t care about the city. All he cares about is his fat stomach!” (p. 158-159). This quote shows that Lina and Doon care about their city, and that they are angry that the Mayor doesn’t feel the same
Q3 Essay The death of a loved one is almost always a critical, clarifying or defining moment in someone’s life. In East of Eden, by John Steinbeck, Adam’s death prompts a moment of realization and illumination in his son, Caleb’s life, as well as the work as a whole. It brought reconciliation and freedom to Caleb’s burdened heart.
The birth of a child is a truly magical occurrence. Once a baby’s gender is determined, either through ultrasound, or from the brief examination of a doctor, this small branch of a family’s inheritance, has already been designated with countless burdensome requirements to follow within their limited world. In regards to historical stereotypes, timid, little girls wear pink skirts and hair bows. These girls grow up to become housewives, who cook, clean and babysit the children. Meanwhile, boisterous young boys have the whole world to conquer and rule. The multiple responsibilities of a man are deemed as very important since he is the person who earns the family income. In contrast, Teddy, the main character of “The Fall of a City” by Canadian author Alden Nowlan, is a very inventive and quiet child, who uses his imagination to build himself a utopian escape in his dark, gloomy attic. He uses scrap paper to create the citizens of Upalia and cardboard to fabricate the radiant city of Theodoresburg. Eventually, Teddy’s aunt worries about what Teddy is constantly doing, hidden away from his family. His uncle heads to the attic only to discover the shocking revelation that Teddy has been playing with paper dolls and a doll house. Teddy’s uncle laughs and teases Teddy mercilessly, culminating in Teddy to go against his accomplishments and lose an important part of his individuality. Furthermore, the conflict between Teddy and his uncle is a manifestation of how many adults, such as
In the essay, “What You Eat is Your Business”, Radley Balko writes to tell his audience about how the government is trying to control people’s health and eating habits by restricting food, taxing high calorie food, and considering menu labeling. Balko includes in his essay that government restricting diets and having socialist insurance is not helping the obesity problem, but it is only making it worse because it not allowing people to take their health in to their own hands so they have no drive to lose weight or eat healthy. In his essay, Balko is targeting society, including those who may be obese, he is trying to show them that the laws our
Do you like mysterious books? If you do, then The City of Ember is the book for you. The City of Ember is about a girl and a boy named Lina and Doon who were not friends at first, but then became best friends. Then they found a set of instructions to get out of Ember and figure the the words out because their city was dying. After, they find a huge room full of boats to ride down the river to get out of Ember. At the end they get out of Ember. First I thought that The City of Ember was about saving the city, now I know it’s way more than that. I now know that the novel is about using teamwork to accomplish goals. Lina and Doon exhibit teamwork throughout the novel because they worked together through the whole book to accomplish a goal by figuring out the words to the instructions and finding all the boats and saving the people of Ember.
When thinking about the gift offering in the biblical story of Cain and Abel and its impact, one can see many similarities in East of Eden. Cain brought to God “the fruit of the ground” and Abel offered God “the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof” (Gen 4 KJV). God preferred the gift of Abel to the gift of Cain.
“The Cato Institute’s” Policy analyst, Radley Balko, in his article “What You Eat Is Your Business,” talks about the idea of obesity and whose fault it is. Balko’s purpose is to convey the idea that obesity is the individual’s responsibility, not the government’s or anyone else’s for that matter. Ultimately, Balko’s “What You Eat Is Your Business” has a strong hold on ethos, pathos, and logos, making for a successful and persuasive article.
Evelines situation becomes an inner battle between the ideas of leaving and staying, all of the thoughts she have sadly become a reality, so many ideas of better places, better times and an overall better life. Eveline is tired: “She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue. Her head was leaned against the window curtains and in her nostrils was the odor
The City of Ember shows the world in a post-apocalyptic form, bleak, lackluster, and in a constant state of decay. The underground city has little light to begin with, and blackouts plague the city, plunging it into a temporary states of complete and utter darkness: “ ‘The blackouts!’ cried Doon…’The lights go out all the time now! And the shortages, there’s shortages of everything! ”(13). The city is meant to last 220 years at most, yet the story takes place at least twenty-one years longer than it was meant to last. There is a severe lack of supplies and wiring problems which could kill the city, and their only source of electricity is a water generator which shows its age: ”The thing seems to break down every couple minutes ”(48). Ember
When it comes to the topic of obesity, most will readily agree that it is a growing dilemma. This argument has many writers bringing different responses. Two explanations are debated in What You Eat is Your Business by Radley Balko and Don’t Blame the Eater by David Zinczenko. Both pieces create a good stance on the topic of obesity. Balko’s piece, however, has a better all around flow, organization and consistency.
Eveline was a female that was brought up in a poor area of Dublin, Ireland. As with all underprivileged areas around the world things were harder. There was a higher importance placed on morals and values. Eveline’s job was to care for her father and the house after her mother passed. A promise she made to her mother on her deathbed, and promises are to be kept. She also had two children that she oversaw caring for. Her responsibilities were routine, comfortable, and safe. There is nothing that the human race likes more than routine. There is a comfort that comes with knowing how things are going to go and
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Sofia is a very opinionated, strong person. With these traits, she teaches Celie how to be assertive. Sofia is not afraid to let people know about her views or opinions, but Celie is the complete opposite. She is too afraid to say anything; she just does what she is told by whoever it may be. “…not Sofia. She do what she want, don’t pay me no mind at all.” (Walker, 63) Harpo beats his girlfriend Sofia, but she has no problem beating him back. Celie understands that it is wrong to beat anyone, but she observe how taken back Harpo is by it and how Sofia has the confidence to do such things. Sofia is Celies reminder that she doesn’t have to stand by while everyone tells her what to do. Celie deserves to get treated respectfully. “Sofia claims her right to speech as she defends her humanity against a remark from the mayor’s wife and her body from assault from the mayor."(Bloom, 134) Sofia stood up to the Mayor after his wife asked her to become their nanny. Although Sofia ends up working for the Mayor, it is for the best because Sofia learns to tone her assertiveness down and Celie learns from it by using her voice to voice her opinions. It may have taken Celie too long to voice her opinion to Mr. ____ but she finally does it. "You a low down dog is what's wrong, I say. It's time to leave you and enter into the Creation. And your dead body just the
Milton’s Paradise Lost has been praised as being the greatest English epic of all time, most stunningly in its author's depiction of the parents of humanity, Adam and Eve. How Milton chose to portray the original mother and father has been a focus of much criticism with contemporary readers. One of the main subjects of these comments is in reference to Eve, who, according to many, is a trivial character that is most definitely inferior to her mate. Nonetheless, many do not recognize that, after the fateful Fall, she becomes a much more evolved character. When Eve is introduced to the storyline of the epic, her character is shallow and extremely undeveloped, meant simply for display. She is quite firmly set as being inferior to her mate
Specifically in Katherine Boo’s, Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity, people in Mumbai simply live differently than how I live in the United States. Life can be happiness while another values life as the ability to grow and escape the slums in which they live. What this means to me in my culture is that I might often take what I think and value in life for granted. I have these options for my life while people in Mumbai might never have any opportunities or options to better their lives at all. We all though, have hope. This desire for a better future though is amplified in the slums and in the lives on the people in Mumbai. This hope is what keeps them alive and sane in their lives and the daily situations they encounter. While for me hope is a motivator to complete small tasks such as a school assignment.
Eveline was a female that was brought up in a poor area of Dublin, Ireland. As with all underprivileged areas around the world things were harsh. There was a higher importance placed on morals and values. Eveline’s job was to care for her father and the house after her mother passed. A promise she made to her mother on her deathbed, and promises are to be kept. She also had two children that she oversaw caring for. Her responsibilities were routine, comfortable, and safe. There is nothing that the human race likes more than routine. There is a comfort that comes with knowing how