“Normal, normal keep acting like everything's normal. I’m climbing a wall as if I’m the lamest superhero in the world and you are dying and everything is normal.” “The Coldest Girl in Coldtown” is about a girl named Tana she was in a very tragic Situation that left everyone dead except her and 2 others. She saves her ex boyfriend Aidan who turned Cold and a vampire named Graviel who was a secret. Soon after the Tragic Situation she goes to a Coldtown because she too might be infected and does not want to hurt her sister or dad. The Puritans would loathe the novel “The Coldest Girl in Coldtown” because of the Supernatural occurrences, people naturally born evil, and many people were law abiding citizens. Puritans would despise the novel “The Coldest Girl in Coldtown” because of the Supernatural Occurrences.How vampires start is after being bitten they become cold. What cold means in this tense s when someone gets bitten by a vampire but they either survive by escaping or the vampire leaves them. Sometimes certain people who have strong immune systems can fight off the infection or they can hole up for a while and fight it off but not many people are lucky enough. Being cold doesn’t mean you are invincible or have became a vampire yet they are in between living and death but need blood to die and come back but some don’t come back.Being cold means you are still resistant to sunlight but slowly you start to crave blood.Becoming a vampire means you have to be willing to kill
In the book, Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson, both Isabel and Ruth lived a slave’s life. Their quality of life varied in the three places they had stayed. Each place they stayed of course had they’re downfalls and some had small perks, but no place was nothing like home. Since the two girls mom was stripped away from the girls leaving them with no one else to protect them, the girls had no other choice then to become a slave. The girls slaved at three places throughout the book.
The novel “The Coldest Winter Ever” by Sister Souljah follows the life of the lead character Winter Santiago and her family. Born in Brooklyn,New York, Winter Santiago was the daughter of a young mother and the notorious drug dealer Ricky Santiago. From the beginning of the novel Winter lets it known that she was born into luxury, and just because she lived in the projects of Brooklyn didn't mean she was poor.In fact it was the exact opposite for the Santiago family.Winter came into adolescence as a shallow, self-centered individual, motivated solely by physical attractiveness, material possessions and the desire to attract as many men as possible. On Winter’s six-tenth birthday her father Ricky Santiago decides it's finally time to move his family out of the ghetto. Winter’s mother and sisters were very excited for the move although Winter was livid. The family’s move to a mansion in Long Island did not stop Winter from desiring her ghetto culture. It also didn’t help that neither parents were actual parents to Winter. Shortly after the family moves to Rhode island the FBI raid the house and arrest Ricky Santiago on several charges. After Santiago’s arrest his empire begins to crumble. All of the family possessions are seized leaving Winter, her mother and her three younger siblings to fend for themselves. Winter selfishness didn't let that happen,she decided to go on her own and hustle her way back into the lifestyle she once lived.Unfortunately things didn't work out for winter the way she wanted. Instead of getting things done on her own Winter looked for a man to take care of her, because that was the only thing her mother taught her. The same man that was supposed to love and take care of her let her take the fall for his crimes, and ultimately sent Winter to jail for a fifth-teen year sentence.
The setting of the novel Frost is taken in almost like the future but still present time. It is in winter during Christmas. The author Wendy Delsol wanted to make the book have a lot of mystery going on. There was always something new happening in almost every chapter, it left you with more things. It left you with wanting to know more.
The book Heat is about a boy named Miguel he is 12 years of age he lives in
Miss Adela Strangeworth is a very peculiar woman. On the outside, she is simply the sweet old lady down the street, but get to know her and she is as cold as ice inside. Miss Strangeworth lives in a small town where everybody knows everybody and nobody knows nobody. The story, “The Possibility of Evil” by Shirley Jackson does not give much as to where this little town is located but what we do know is it has a post office, a market, and the lovely Strangeworth house with roses out front. The one and only Miss Adela Strangeworth, sweet yet disastrously deceptive, possessive, and harsh.
In literature, winter and cold are commonly associated with death, however, when it comes to cold in this excerpt, the more prominent motif of cold represents the lack of affection. In Ethan Frome, Edith Wharton makes excellent use of the similar motifs of cold and ice to characterize Zeena. Throughout the excerpt from chapter two, these motifs heavily contribute to Zeena’s cold self, her treatment towards Ethan, and their dimming relationship relationship,
Cold Sassy tells a story of a family who is dealing with a traumatic loss of a loved one. In trying to adjust to the traumatic loss of their mom, grandma, and neighborhood friend. The have been pushed to adjust to the new love life of their dad, granddad and neighborhood friend. As Cold Sassy tries to to come to grips of their new neighbor Miss Love, they are also trying to come to grip of the new technology that is making its way into the homes of people of “Sassyville” Moving out of the 19th century into the 20th century, “Sassyville” is beginning to see new technologies such as automobiles, telephones. and new indoor plumbing and toliets.
The negative tone, cold, is conveyed through the identification of figurative language and diction. A cold tone is described as, having little appeal to the senses or feelings. In section one of Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury uses figurative language to communicate his cold attitude toward the text. For example, Bradbury wrote, “It was like coming into the cold marbled room of a mausoleum after the moon had set,” (Bradbury 9). This simile, compares Montag walking into his bedroom with him walking into a cold marbled room. Upon coming home after his encounter with Clarisse, Montag was introduced to new aspects of life. Furthermore, Montag’s home setting appeared differently to him then. When one enters their home, they should develop a sense of comfort.
Stitching Snow by R.C. Lewis is a science fiction novel that follows the life of Essie, a girl
Charles Frazier’s first novel, Cold Mountain, has earned him a great amount of notoriety. From having a film adaptation of his novel in 2003, to receiving a National Book Award in fiction in 1997. Cold Mountain opens with a quotation from a journal entry by Charles Darwin: “It is difficult to believe in the dreadful but quiet war of organic beings, going on in the peaceful woods and smiling fields.” And indeed, Frazier’s acclaimed novel describes a war of beings built of flesh and blood–of course not only in the sense of the Civil War. While man’s lone task in war is to destroy the opposition, Frazier’s novel is also dedicated to the struggle which an individual must face in order to survive in a natural environment. From Frazier’s standpoint, the usage of this particular quotation could be a confirmation of Darwin’s influence on his literature. The term naturalism describes a category of literature that applies scientific principles of detachment and objectivity to its reading of human beings. The literary movement of naturalism got its foundation from Darwin’s theory of evolution. In his novel, Frazier makes use of real historical backgrounds and geographical locations. Combined with a style following realism, amidst extensive passages of naturalistic descriptions. There are clear similarities between Darwin’s conclusions and the plot of Cold Mountain.
Because the Victorian Era was an age so heavily influenced by religion, it is hardly surprising, that Bram Stoker’s Dracula contains many religious references. The Victorian Era was a time period from 1837 to 1901, during which Queen Victoria reigned in the United Kingdom. During this time, women were expected to be quiet, proper, and pure. All people were expected to attend church, and sexuality was incredibly censored. Religion played an influencing role in Victorian art including visual and literary. Likewise, the fear of being sinful, or not following the Bible was still a fear from the under educated members of society. The prominent branches of Christianity in this era, Protestants and Catholics, dominated the popular culture of western societies. Given the religious context of the Victorian Era, Vampires in Bram Stoker’s Dracula represent sin and have inherently sinful behavior, whereas the humans represents goodness and religion, no matter which kind of religion.
“Vampire Religion” is an article written about Bram Stoker’s “Dracula.” The article is one that was found very useful in reading and understanding the story. Christopher Herbert, the author, argues of the importance that religion and events of the world played on the writing of “Dracula.” There are two parts to the article, one is “Religion/Superstition” and the second part is “The Vampire in the Church.” Both parts are vital to the article.
In the story, "The Woman in the Snow" by Patricia C. Mckissack, two bus drivers encounter a woman standing outside in the snow with her baby, asking for a ride; however, this event occurs in different time periods. One of the bus drivers was a white man named Grady. The other one was an African -American man named Ray. The theme, empathy can be hard for others to give, but when there is empathy it can be meaningful is illustrated as Grady isn't compassionate towards the woman's situation and Ray is the opposite. When Grady came upon the woman with her baby standing in the snow, he had no sympathy towards her since he was privileged and didn't understand the struggle.
In a country where Divorce is more normalized than ever before, one can be guilty of neglecting to consider the pain it can cause, not just the couple, but also their children. The short story “Hot or Cold” by Maile Meloy is a remembrance from the author's life which communicates the divorce of her parents represented in a nostalgic memory from her past. In the piece, the author’s young self plays in a van while her parents deal with an unexpected encounter with a bear. After a brief chase, the parents escape and the family drives away. The author masterfully develops the story by hinting at the nature of the parents relationship by adding clever metaphors, until it is apparent that the parents eventually divorce and that the story is only a dream. In the short story, the author utilizes juxtaposition, a motif, and metaphors, to suggest that memories create narratives, true or otherwise, that help one comprehend events that are otherwise incomprehensible.
At first glance, Joss Whedon's "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," the hour-long TV series which premiered in 1997 and is now in its third season, bears little resemblance to the book which started the vampire craze -- Bram Stoker's Dracula, published a century earlier. And yet, looks can be deceiving. Although the trendy -- and often skimpy -- clothing and bandied about pop-culture references of "Buffy" clearly mark the series as a product of a far different culture than that of the Victorian England of Dracula, the underlying tensions of the two texts are far similar than one might think. Beneath the surface differences in the treatment of their heroines, the two texts