Lock & Key by Sarah Dessen. Have you ever felt like you were ever left alone, and then everything turns out okay? This book is about how the main character Ruby, moves from her own house when her mother abandoned her when she was fourteen, and then a year later she has to go live with her sister and mother in-law. At first moving away from her comfort zone a little bit intimidating at first, but then Ruby begins to realize that not everything turns into a disaster in the end. Then she realizes that not all change is bad.
“ ‘Well’, she said adjusting a pot lid, ‘I have my family of origin, which is you and mom. And then Jamie’s family, my family of marriage. And hopefully, I’ll have another family, as well.Our family that we make. Me and Jamie.” (Dessen 287). This passage explains how Ruby and her sister are hoping to expand and keep peace
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This house is important to the main character because she wears the key to the house around her neck, because she made many memories there and her childhood was established there. One setting from the novel was Ruby’s house that she lived in. This house is important to the main character because she wears the key to the house around her neck, because she made many memories there and her childhood was established there. The house that Ruby used to live in is important to the plot because is she never lived there, the whole situation with her mom and sister would have never happened. Not many people wear the key to the house that they used to live in around their neck. “Many people wonder why I wear this key from my old house around my neck. They just don’t know the incredible stories and memories behind it.” (Dessen 28). This quote explains how important the house is to the plot and conflict of the story, and how much stories and memories are behind the key on the necklace that she wears everyday. This necklace is related to a lot of conflicts that go on in this
1. Buck - A half St. Bernard and half sheepdog that was kidnapped and sold as a sled dog.
The house is a connection to who the characters are, their being and culture. This is evident when the “black fella” is constantly telling Quick to “go home” throughout the story, referring to Cloudstreet. Rose’s decision to give up her house in the new suburbs and move back to Cloudstreet is also an example of this connection to the house, as Rose and Quick, as part of their character development, realise they cannot abandon who they are; they cannot abandon Cloudstreet.
The house is another symbol used in the story which seems to carry an associative relationship with Emily Grierson. In the opening paragraph, Emily is referred to as a “fallen monument” (Faulkner, p.668). Once young and full of promise, Emily’s appearance in later years are described as “bloated, like a
As sentimental tone becomes evident frequently through the story, the author uses determination to display the struggles and growth that the author experiences. One of the major quotes that shows determination through a sentimental tone can be displayed as the hotel burning down where the Walls currently lived. Walls stated, “I wonder if the fire had been out to get me. I wonder if all fire was related . . . I didn’t have the answers to those questions, but what I did know was that I lived that at any moment could erupt . . . It was the sort of knowledge that kept you on your toes” (Walls 34). This excerpt explains that the author and her family struggle through life to find a decent home--that they can afford. Jeannette spills her emotions through this quote; her struggles become strengths, as she narrates her childhood. The author displays the theme of struggle and the sentimental tone when “. . . the whole family stretched out on the benches and the floor of the depot and read, with the dictionary in the middle of the room so [the] kids could look up words [they] didn't know. . .” (Walls 56). This quote really tears at the reader’s heart strings, as the family copes with their living situations. Jeannette exceeds with describing the story; adding imagery to the situation creates the sentimental tone. The idea of struggle and growth portrays the main point of the overall
The symbolism of the necklaces proves that family leads to belonging. The first example of this is Mrs. Brync asking Dorothy (Vivian) about her claddagh cross and Dorothy answers, “‘The hands clasped
On one side, there is Kathy Nicolo and Sheriff Lester Burdon who want the house from which Kathy was evicted. It previously belonged to Kathy’s father and she is reluctant to relinquish possession of it. Then there is the Behranis, a Persian family who was forced to flee to America in fear of their lives. They want the house because it symbolizes their
The brother and sister share closer relationships than they should , and their houses somewhat represent the lives they live. With both stories having an unexplainable ending , such as why the house crumbled at the end of “Fall of the House of Usher”
The Chantecleer Restaurant is located in the heart of the Green Mountains. The building is a remodeled dairy barn in which a huge stone fireplace has been added. The horseshoe-shaped bar is perfect for meeting up after work and perhaps enjoying some appetizers. Speaking of appetizers, some popular options include the escargots masion in pernod butter sauce, Spanish octopus with anchovies and olives, pork and leek potstickers and French baked onion soup. The artisanal cheese board is another great choice at The Chantecleer Restaurant.
Every person has on object in their life that is very precious to the, for me, it is my pearl necklace. They are small and round and a lustrous cream color with a pink sheen. They have a tiny gold clasp that holds the necklace together. My pearls tell a story than no other personal artifact can: my heritage. The pearls symbolized tradition and womanhood in my family’s life, and they were to be worn with dignity and pride. Every holiday, the girls of the family accessorized their outfits with the pearls given by our grandmother. They were something we all had in common: the thread that linked our generations together. I recall looking down at my Nana’s casket and I could almost hear her voice whispering
Hester Prynne and Roger Chillingworth disagree over the treatment and the overall fate of Priest Dimmesdale. As demonstrated in the quote, “Hast thou not tortured him enough?" said Hester, noticing the old man's look. "Has he not paid thee all?" , Hester is advocating on the side of the priest, dissuading any further torment upon him. In addition, the reader can infer that Hester is attempting to take responsibility for the whole sin, attempting to ease the guilt of the priest.
of the fact that she is kept in the house. One specific characteristic of the house that symbolizes
Everyone has a family of some kind. It may be the parents and siblings they were born with, or it could be the gang of six biologically unrelated elite drivers with an affinity for robbing banks at high speeds from Fast and the Furious. Ultimately, family is what people make of it, and it can be the ‘traditional’ two parents, one brother, one sister, and a dog named Spot, or it could be a woman and the kid she was left with. The term ‘traditional family' refers to the socially expected behaviors of each given role (for example, a mother taking her kid to the doctor,) in the family. Members of a traditional family in this case are either maritally or biologically related. Barbara Kingsolver’s The Bean Trees has many characters who would consider themselves, or be considered, part of different families. The Bean Trees addresses and deals with the fact that nontraditional families can be just as strong as what society has defined as a ‘traditional’ family.
Today, the U.S contains five percent of the world 's population and it holds twenty-five percent of the world 's prisoners. Approximately one out of every four prisoners on the planet is in a U.S prison. The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) makes over 30,000 arrests each year related to the sales and distribution of illegal narcotics. In 1986 the Anti-Drug Abuse act set the 5 and 50 gram quantities for crack cocaine which triggered the five and ten year mandatory minimum jail sentence for crack cocaine. This created a conflict with the ratio from crack to powder cocaine because it was 100:1 meaning a person caught with crack cocaine would be more likely to serve longer jail time than a person caught with powder cocaine. The unfair ratio would get a person caught with 5 grams of crack cocaine the same amount of jail time as a person who is caught with 28 grams of powder cocaine. An issue seen around the country is that people of minority are treated unfair under the law. Not only are people being treated unequally under the law but we are adding to the issue of mass incarceration. The Fair Sentencing Act, which will reduce the amount of people who are sentenced to prison for crack and powder cocaine is beneficial because prisons have become so overcrowded and so many people have been sentenced to jail unfairly and are serving ridiculous sentences for nonviolent drug offenses.
Additionally, the family of choice consists of people one feels as obligated to as if one was of blood relation. These self-constructed families are no less real or less meaningful than conventional families. In fact, they are known as one’s fictive kin. The bond of this type of family can be formed through several ways. Natalie writes, “for some people, voluntary kinship filled a void left by death or estrangement from biological family, while for others the relationships were supplemental or temporary.” It can be a friendship that turns into a family or a group that one relates to as a family. Either way, the fictive kin family is a blossoming family type. Increasingly, people refer to this as their second family. Some choose it to be their first family when they feel
The word family has changed so much in the past century. A family back in the 1950’s was probably considered a husband, wife, and one or more children. Times have changed and families have become much different. The Interpersonal Communication: Relating to Others book defines family as a, “Unit made up of any number of persons who live in relationship with one another over time in a common living space who are usually, but not always, united by marriage and kinship” (Beebe, Beebe & Redmond, 243). Families can be broken up into five different types. The first is the traditional family, which includes a mother, father, and their biological children. Next, is the blended family which includes