YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Three Popular American Novels
Essays 3001 - 3030
can do no wrong, which makes her introduction to the novel somewhat gooey and overwrought. However, she does point out that Woolf ...
can be trusted; it is the ultimate in paranoid societies. By keeping its citizens fearful and mistrustful of each other, the gover...
these memories will be. He learns that the memories are of a different time, when people loved and laughed and suffered, something...
Bradbury insists that its not. Instead, he sees television as the thing that will eventually kill books, and that is what hes warn...
the table that are unfamiliar to him, and he begins reading the poetry of Swinburne, "forgetful of where he was, his face glowing"...
or "Do you have home room all year?" Kaufman throws the reader in at the deep end by not using quotation marks, or telling us whos...
the novel, the term city is used interchangeably with the term citizen to reinforce this unity: "Our city, my city... Without a ci...
man with a dreadful face. Its center was red and empty; blood streamed from it into his mouth and beard ... both shoulders dripped...
age: "To her son these words conveyed an extraordinary joy, as if it were settled, the expedition were bound to take place, and th...
these farmers in the characterization of a single family, the Joads. From what was left of their Oklahoma homestead to their jour...
how socially shocking they might be. Lucys mother always has the best intentions and willing to share openly her thoughts and fe...
lifetime - to become the knight-errant hero like those of the Round Table he always fantasized being. The life of a 50-year-old w...
carried in the pockets of her apron...They were all love, lovers, sweethearts, persecuted ladies fainting in lonely pavilions, pos...
time which has caused him to think of himself as incredibly special: "In this world John, who was, his father said, ugly, who was ...
The author totally immerses herself in the tragic Venus many hardships, imagining what she saw, felt, and experienced during her s...
were signified by it" (1323). He then goes into great narrative detail to describe the letter to emphasize its significance: "The...
the novel as it pertains to Phoebus. Phoebus is a military man and Esmerelda is quite taken with him. She feels he is a real man a...
It is also interesting to note that when they grow, and separate, they take on the roles of their mothers: "Nel struggles to a con...
to the community, a clear case of moral ambiguity wherein Sula and her family felt they had a right and that their behavior was, o...
are societies that do not allow for individuality or for original thought and for human beings this is crucial to their identity. ...
and identities within himself. But, he fails miserably at truly becoming more than he is and this is a problem. As noted, his prob...
could serve to sever Fern from her First Nations heritage. Fortunately, that turns out to not be the case. Fern actually grows s...
atmosphere of oppression and dread that is remarkable in literature. But 1984 seems to go beyond the panopticon, which seems almos...
to investigate if the residents of a bioship are being brainwashed. (The term "padawan" is the Jedi term for "apprentice.") Obi-Wa...
to Elizabeth Bennett and Maria Lucas, who have been staying with him and his wife for six weeks. Mrs. Collins is Elizabeths sister...
"device" through which he tells not only the story of the battle, but the story of Spartan life as well. Pressfield structures the...
frees him from this indignity and travesty of life by smothering him with a pillow and then escapes from the asylum (One Flew, 199...
is very short, "sexuality seems still to be a strongbox hiding the mystery of a womans I" (Kundera 200). So, because he is truly f...
that specified that a concern for ones own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rationa...
demonstrations and anti-Vietnam War protests. Majoring in political science at St. Paul, Minnesotas Macalester College, writing a...