Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Little Women by Louisa May ALcott: Final reading Response

    In Little Women by Louisa May Alcott, The four main characters desire to have luxury and be stress free. They also are tired of working and want leisure time. Their mother had set up a week where they didn't have to do any chores. They learned over that week that doing work is better than not doing any work at all. This experience teaches them that while chores may be tedious, doing your part can help everything run smoothly, and in turn help you.
    The main characters didn't really know how to cook. This was a problem when it came to breakfast. Since the girls weren't going to be doing any work, their mother decided she wasn't either. The girls made breakfast and it came out horrible. "The boiled tea was very bitter, the omelet scorched, and the biscuits were speckled with saleratus" (Alcott 170). When one of the girls wanted to invite over a friend, they also had to make food for their guest. She had made food that "she had convinced herself she could not make fit to eat" (Alcott 175).
    Things were quite a mess because no one was doing their chores. They became lazy and cleaned messes sometimes by "whisking the litter under the sofa" (Alcott 171). They also "shut the blinds, to save the trouble of dusting" (Alcott 171). The dishes piled up and after a while they got bored of lounging all day.
    Their mother taught them a valuable lesson. That when we all do our part everything runs smoothly. All play and no work can be just as bad as all work and no play.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Reading Response: Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

    In Little Women by Louisa May Alcott, four sisters and their mother live a simple, yet enjoyable life. They are not very wealthy, but find happiness within each other. They find strength within each other, they look after one another, and they even show each other their unity.
    The four sisters do many things together and spend quality time with each other. They are always in their family room, knitting. They formed a group out of them four, they called it the Pickwick Club. They made a small newspaper "to which they all contributed to" (Alcott 154). They also learn to get along quite well as Alcott said the girls' tastes "differed as much as their character" (153). 
    They all look after each other, even if they are upset at each other. They will put anything aside to help one another. Even though Jo was upset at Amy for ruining a very prized possession of Jo's, she felt bad for letting Amy get hurt. She was "looking remorsefully at [Amy's] golden head (Alcott 121). 
     They try to incorporate others in their family time. Their next door neighbor, Laurie, was very lonely.JO wanted to let her sisters and herself keep him company. She told him "We are not strangers, we are neighbors, and you needn't think you'd be a bother" (Alcott 63).
    They sit in their family room and are satisfied with talking to one another. They don't need expensive items. Although they wish they had them, they are far more grateful for their family and friends.



Saturday, May 14, 2011

What inner and outer conflicts arise in the transition from childhood to adulthood?

    In my opinion, one main issue that comes up is wanting to rebel and not follow rules. We want to grow up so quickly, and when we finally do get there, it's overrated to us. everyone wants to be independent in one way or another at a point in their life. We just need to realize that our family is always going to be there for us, and at this time, they are the ones we tend to neglect the most.
   In my lifetime, there is going to be so many things I am going through that my parents have already experienced. But I don't think I will ever learn to listen to them. It's sad how most of us don't. We don't give our parents enough credit for having experienced everything we have. But the truth is, someday I want to be as strong and wise as my parents.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Reading Response: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Final Draft)

In One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest written by Ken Kesey in 1962, you have to choose sides. This book showed power struggle in every sense of the phrase. At the time this book was written, race and gender determined where you were on the social pyramid. Here is a book, where in a certain mental asylum, the woman was in charge and the blacks harassed the whites. Almost an inverted reality for the time period.

The head person in charge was a woman, known as the Big Nurse. She was constantly being compared to machines with their precision and monotony. SHe was as Kesey described "in the center of this web of wires like a watchful robot" (29). She kept everything neat and had "gotten more and more skillful over the years" (Kesey 28). She held a power within the asylum "that extended in all direction on hairlike wires" (Kesey 29). She had the most obedient workers. Everyone respected her did as she said.

The 3 janitors the Big Nurse had working for her were black. Most of the residents were white and none were identified to be black. The janitors were looked upon as law enforcers but they actually mistreated the patients. They were said to have "swatted the backs of their legs to hurry them past" (Kesey 3). They were not stopped because they were not stopped because they were of higher authority than the patients.

This book showed a perspective where you have no power. In that position, you would've understood how women and blacks felt at the time the book written. They were controlled, abused, and had no control of their surroundings. This book had shown the current reality, but the roles were reversed.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Narrative Poem

Writer's Block

I wish I had a constant muse
Everything is in the right place
But my mind

I can do it
But i choose not to
But I have responsibilities and I can't help but wonder how I affect others

I can change they way people look at things
as people have for me

and I wonder shouldn't the motivation from that thought be enough?

Sunday, March 20, 2011

One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey: Response

    For my book club, I am reading One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. The time period is around the 1960's. So far, this book is about a chief that was admitted into an insane asylum (narirator)  and now has a new " housemate" if you will.  The new guy's name is McMurphy. He is the most outgoing and daring loony that hospital has ever seen. He thinks he will be taking over, but the Big Nurse (Nurse Ratched) has another plan. She holds the lives of all the patients at the asylum, and she is looked to with great fear and respect.
  
    I like the fact that the head person in charge is a  women. In the 1960's women were not as powerful as men. She is constantly compared to machines and their precision and monotony. Although I am an animate person, I aspire to be organized and efficient. Somewhat perfect. It seems as though she is just that. NO one or thing can stop her from getting the job done.

    Race also seems to be a big factor. The janitors are black and it is constantly mentioned throughout the chapters that I have read. The nurse is always being compared to porclein and pale things. She also treats them as her puppets and has complete control over them. In the 1960's there was not much racial inequality and in a way it shows that these two different races are united in some way.

    But all in all, I am looking forward to reading the rest of this book. It ha ssome old language in it, but the characters say such outrageous things, you won't get bored.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

MY Independent Book: The Kite Runner

In this book, there has been so many sad moments. But I think they teach a lot of lessons. But sometimes, I think it is hard for most people to relate to this book.

    There is a lot of talk about nature and flying kites. I think for a young audience, this hobby is not common. Nowadays, We are all into technology. We don't know what it is like to jump in a river and not a pool. And we certainly don't know what it is like to spend all of your day playing in the street.

But there are relatable themes in this book.
One is that the main character feels like he has to get approval from his father. I think everyone cares about what there parents think. But me, personally, I couldn't imagine having to impress my parents, because they love me know matter what.