Pre-AP English 1
Monday, May 4, 2015
Ender's game was a book filled with action and adventure centering on the youngest of three or also known as a third. He is the one the military has been looking for to lead the attack on the buggers world it would end the war, but before all this he has to be tested and put though cadet training. He is moved quickly through training and soon gets his own team. They move up in the leader boards and reach the top. He also has a game he plays, a strategic game that test his will and odd things happen and it has a major role to the end of the book. He is soon sent to a bugger base that had been abandoned where he meets a famous war hero believed to be dead and is amazed and has many questions for him. On earth his brother and sister become major speakers for the people but no one knows they are kids. On the abandoned buggers hide out he begins training on commanding large ships with many of his friends from the cadet school. They are in command of their own ships now. I'm going to stop here. If i told you anymore it would ruin the end.
music
show smaug's gratuitous flight as he gets ever closer to lake town. then it gets more intense as he begins setting the town a blaze the arrow is shot into his stomach and returns to peaceful music.
this is the end result of the battle many dead and the dwarf with losses also being very sad as characters you have come to love have died and the devastation beneath the mountain .
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Catherine Hardwicke if your reading this it's too late...
Dracula Writing Style
By Operation Victor "Definitely not Trevor" Frankenstein
After reading reading 388 pages of Bram Stoker's famous novel, I think I can finally give a solid interpretation of Stoker's writing style... (Also sorry for taking so long on this because IE crashed on me... Twice.)
As I said before in a previous blog, Bram Stoker is proficient in creating suspense while still moving the plot along. Ever since the beginning of the book Dracula remained present, but ominous. Johnathan Harker (the protagonist) unaware of who Count Dracula was (despite being invited to Castle Dracula) states, "I could hear a lot of queer words, for there were many nationalities in the crowd; so I quietly got my polyglot dictionary from my bag and looked them out. I must say they were not cheering to me, for amongst them were "Ordog"-Satan, "pokol"-hell, "stregoica"-witch, "vrolok" and "vlkoslak"-both of which mean the same thing, one being Slovak and the other Servian for something that is either werewolf or vampire." (Page 36)
Uneasy, and quite worried, Johnathan starts to question his objectives and fearing for the worst, "This was not very pleasant for me, just starting for an unknown place to meet an unknown man; but everyone seemed so kind-hearted, and so sorrowful, so sympathetic that I could not but be touched." Stoker makes his characters relatable, and for good reason. You feel Jonathan's pain, confusion and despair throughout the novel, creating a suspenseful and melancholy for the audience. However, that's not all, since I haven't cover the antagonist, *spoilers, okay not really because you should have saw this coming unless you've been living under a rock* Count Dracula himself.
Stoker must have spent along time on this novel, because of it's wide historical context on Transylvania, Romania and several other European countries. However, what sticks out is the Count himself. Acknowledging Frankestien for a bit, most horror readers are aware that pop culture, movies, etc tend to alternate the "vampire image" overtime.
(Sorry I couldn't resist...)
Johnathan describes Dracula as follows, "His face was a strong- a very strong- aquiline, with high bridge of the thin nose and peculiar arched nostrils; with lofty domed forehead, and hair growing scantily round the temples, but profusely elsewhere. His eyebrows were very massive, almost meeting over the nose, and his bushy hair that seemed to curl in its own profusion. The mouth so far as I could see it under the heavy moustache, was fixed and rather cruel-looking, with peculiarly sharp white teeth; these protruded over the lips, who remarkable ruddiness showed astonishing vitality in a man of his years. For the rest, his ears were pale and at the tops extremely pointed; the chin was broad and strong, and cheeks firm though thin. The general effect was on extremely pallor." (Page 48)
Dracula compared to other interpretations on the Count, seems human more or less (with the exception of fangs, and hid distinguished nose). Stoker most likely did this on purpose to level with his audience. Despite the "helpless old man inviting house guest over" trope has been done before in stories like "Hansel and Gretel", it has never been so refined...
Yet I still find it funny that Johnathan uses garlic, the crucifix, a wild rose... Too bad Dracula didn't order... the steak (just kidding, he gets stabbed by a knife... and now I just forgot to put spoilers)
The Count, despite being no more that a blood-sucking, shape-shifting force of nature, he's also emotional. Soon before Johnathon falls unconscious, the
Dracula, like said before, has a very general writing style. Compared to novel like Frankenstein, again, is that it doesn't require critical thinking to soak in the context. Granted, Frankenstein didn't give me a five hour history course on the Hun, Carpathians and Romania History, however, Dracula didn't give me a story about a trouble scientist and a hormonal, emotional monster that has a great ending... but made fall asleep 7 chapters into the book. Dracula is a great novel (and despite ranting so is Frankenstein), and its writing style is superb, but what puts it over the top as my favorite horror novel (sorry Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Coraline) is it's "letter/diary" format.
Throughout the novel, Jonathan and several other characters are revealed, communicating and acted out through letters/personal diaries, for example:
MY FRIEND,- Welcome to the Carpathians. I am anxiously expecting you. Sleep well tonight. At three tomorrow the diligence will start for Bukovina; a place on it is kept for you. At Borgo Pass my carriage will await you and will bring you to me. I trust that your journey from London has been a happy one, and that you will enjoy your stay in my beautiful land.
Your Friend,
DRACULA,
(Page 34)
This method is simply to extended communication (since this book came in the late 1800s), but it works pretty well as far as the plot goes.
Unfortunately, Dracula's ending pulls a "Mary Shelley" and drags on way too long.
*If you don't want spoilers, skip this part*
"I felt a mighty power fly along my arm ; and it was without surprise I saw that the monster cower back before a similar movement made spontaneously by each one of us. It would be impossible to describe the expression of hate and baffled malignity- of anger and hellish rage- which came over the Count's face. His waxen hue became greenish-yellow by the contrast of his burning eyes, and the red scar on the forehead showed on the pallid skin like a palpitating wound". (Page 347) After a bit more flavor text, Dracula turns to ashes, Quincey (another main character) dies from fatal wounds delivered by The Count (I'm still not sure why Quincey needed to die though despite Stoker's reasoning) and Johnathan and Co spend the rest of the book playing patty cake and gossip over how many a female vampire lusted with Johnathan behind closed doors.
Still, the novel has set a standard for modern writers, and movies to come. Straightforward and general, Bram Stoker provides a proficient story with a sufficient ending that I think both classic and contemporary horror fans would enjoy.
Also Count Orlok from Nosferatu (1922) is the best vampire ever made...
Source:
Stoker, Bram, and Glennis Byron. Dracula. Peterborough, Ont.: Broadview, 1998. Print.
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Eli Bates
Ms.Whitman
Pre-AP English 1
12/3/2015
The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby by f. Scott Fitzgerald is a sensational
classic written in the 20's. Fitzgerald has some unique style choices, you can
easily notices how much detail he puts into nick caraway’s (the main protagonist)
thoughts. There was a movie recently made of it in which it stays very
dedicated to the book only scrapping minor details from the comparison I drew between the two.
You can see multiple examples throughout the
book. "yet high over the city our line of yellow windows must have
contributed their share of human secrecy to the casual watcher within the
darkening streets, and I was him too, looking up and wondering, I was within
and without." this quote is from the second chapter where nick is looking
out an apartment window over the city while partying with his old college mate,
Tom.
He also is very good with using imagery, he has quite a few instances of his use of vivid imagery throughout the book as well."there were twinkle-bells of sunshine in the room." or "through the twilight universe Daisy began to move again with the season; suddenly she was again keeping beads and dying orchids on the floor beside her bed."
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat and its Informative Style
Ishaan Patel 5th hour
Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat is an amazing novel and very informative. It also tells us the story of a man who goes to the Barrens to study wolves. A scientist who wants to know the wolves very well so they he travels to Ottawa, Canada. Then, he gets dropped of in the middle of a forest where wolves were or the Barrens. From there on, he studies the wolces that live in the forest and the Eskimo culture. The style, informative, is used in this novel greatly and effectively. His style is very admirable. I admire his style, infirmative, in this book, too. His style is characterized in the informative category. His style is showed in many pages of the novel. He also uses great diction and syntax throughput the novel. For example, "His attitude of fatigue vanished and was replaced by a look of bewilderment" (83). He uses big and key words in this sentence. The words are also set up in a very sophisticated sequence. These big and key words he uses make the text sound informative. This means diction and syntax create a informative and a better (understanding of the) novel. The structure of the sentence also makes the text sound informative. He uses these big and key words to help his experiment and conclusion which also makes the text informative. This is how the text demonstrates the style, informative, and how well syntax and diction is used in this text. Another example is, "The results of the analysis were most interesting. Some 48 per cent of the seat contained rodent remains, largely incisive teeth and fur" (227). This text is telling us that he is writing his conclusion to the observations of the wolves. Usually, when you write a conclusion, it is informative and it was. It tells us a fact or a result of the observations which is informative because it tells us that his conclusion is informative, like the rest of the book, because it has facts and results.
Imagery is used very well in this novel. It allows you to see things in your mind going on in the book. Figurative language is used but not as good and much as imagery. Imagery really helps the ready understand the book. It's impact on the book and reader is big and positive. For example, "As I looked about me at the stark and cloud-topped hills, the waste of pressure-rippled ice, and, beyond the valley, to the desolate and treeless roll of tundra, I had no doubt that this was excellent wolf country" (35). As you can see, there is very well used imagery in this sentence. The imagery in the sentence truly gives us an idea about what the Barrens look like. The imagery words in the sentence, cloud-topped, pressure-ripples, treeless, valley, and tundra, really helped the reader picture the Barrens in his mind. That's how powerful imagery is. It can make the reader picture things on his mind so it is kind of like they are watching a movie about the novel. The reader of Never Cry Wolf now knows that the Barrens have no trees, are cloudy, have crushed ice, and many other things. This impact is huge toward the reader and book. It is also effective. Another example is, "A small streak ran through it. It also embraced an area of grassy marsh which was alive with meadow mice: an ideal place for the pups to learn the first principles of hunting" (145). Now the reader knows what the surroundings of the new summer den for Angeline, George, Uncke Albert. And the pups looks like. The reader knows that the wolves are near water and food. This has a big impact in the book on the wolves, the reader, the narrator, and the book itself, too. The imagery of this sentence tells us that the wolves moved from there den, not near food and water, to the new which has food and water. This helps the narrators observations and conclusions because he knows now that the wolves move to a den close to food and water during the summer. This impacts the narrator because it gives him one more fact for his conclusion. This really helps his style, informative.
The novel, Never Cry Wolf, is a very great novel to read. I liked it but at times it was boring because it was too much of a imformative and sophisticated novel for me. Although I liked it, I wouldn't recommend this book to all readers. The only readers that I would recommend his book to are the scientists, science loving readers, and animal (wolf) loving readers. Scientists would love this book because it's about science and how a scientist observes wolves and draws conclusions about what they do in life. Other people who are not scientists, science loving readers, or animal (wolf) loving readers should only read this book if they have nothing to do. If you have spare time, like I did, I would urge you to read this book. This book is great for scientists and science loving readers, and good for animal (wolf) lovers. For other readers, it would be a decent book for them. If you are not a scientist, science loving reader, or animal (wolf) loving reader, I would only read this book if you have spare time because it would help you past time and you might even enjoy it. In my opinion, this is a good pickup novel which is only good for reading on your spare time. Now if the reader were a scientist, science loving reader, or animal (wolf) loving reader, the reader should read this book pronto. Overall, the novel, Never Cry Wolf, is a novel meant to be read by certain people [scientists, science loving readers, or animal (wolf) loving readers] who can relate to this book.
Boy Nobody Style Annalysis
Tarynn Grundy
Boy Nobody
The story "Boy Nobody" by Allen Zadoff, creates a vivid description of a very unique teenager who has a very unique job. Boy Nobody, the main character, completes specific and strategic missions. The people who give him his assignments are known as his “parents” who aren't his real parents but more like mentors that trained him to complete assignments. When Boy Nobody revives his mission, which is to execute the target, he builds a relationship with a close family member of the target, eventually he is able to kill the person he was assigned to. After the mission is completed Boy Nobody then slips out of town without anyone noticing. Allen Zadoff does a great job leading up to the climax with suspense.
Allen Zadoff creates a conflict that starts close to the beginning of the story and ends at the very end of the book. Boy Nobody has to kill someone, he becomes close to that someone's daughter and shares things that aren't supposed to be said and does things that aren't supposed to be done; that causes him to get in trouble and almost take down the company and people he works for. I admire the style the Zadoff used during the climax of the book because of how intriguing it is, it's my favorite part. The suspense created is just amazing, Zadoff uses many effects to express a change in the situation or to show tension in the room.An example of this is “The music changes. The bass slows.” (136). The use of short sentences implies great meaning and importance. Zadoff’s use of those short sentences shows a change in the situation and the tension rising.
I would recommend this book to anyone. It is very captivating and the reviews are great. If anyone is looking for a thriller with a little romance, this is the book for them. I think most teens would enjoy the romance of the story; its between the main character and his most important target’s daughter, Sam. The love between Boy Nobody and Sam is almost high school like; its very cute. Boy Nobody thinks about Sam in a funny way, he’s confused just like a teenage girl trying to pick out her outfit for a date. “I don't know this person, the one who avoids a girl because he doesn't know what to say to her. I don't know the guy who is distracted, who worries, who takes chances that are not strictly necessary.” (226). Zadoff,, the author, did a great job expressing the compassion Boy Nobody has for Sam. Zadoff did a great job with this book, I hope the sequel will be out soon because this book is extremely captivating.
Boy Nobody
The story "Boy Nobody" by Allen Zadoff, creates a vivid description of a very unique teenager who has a very unique job. Boy Nobody, the main character, completes specific and strategic missions. The people who give him his assignments are known as his “parents” who aren't his real parents but more like mentors that trained him to complete assignments. When Boy Nobody revives his mission, which is to execute the target, he builds a relationship with a close family member of the target, eventually he is able to kill the person he was assigned to. After the mission is completed Boy Nobody then slips out of town without anyone noticing. Allen Zadoff does a great job leading up to the climax with suspense.
Allen Zadoff creates a conflict that starts close to the beginning of the story and ends at the very end of the book. Boy Nobody has to kill someone, he becomes close to that someone's daughter and shares things that aren't supposed to be said and does things that aren't supposed to be done; that causes him to get in trouble and almost take down the company and people he works for. I admire the style the Zadoff used during the climax of the book because of how intriguing it is, it's my favorite part. The suspense created is just amazing, Zadoff uses many effects to express a change in the situation or to show tension in the room.An example of this is “The music changes. The bass slows.” (136). The use of short sentences implies great meaning and importance. Zadoff’s use of those short sentences shows a change in the situation and the tension rising.
I would recommend this book to anyone. It is very captivating and the reviews are great. If anyone is looking for a thriller with a little romance, this is the book for them. I think most teens would enjoy the romance of the story; its between the main character and his most important target’s daughter, Sam. The love between Boy Nobody and Sam is almost high school like; its very cute. Boy Nobody thinks about Sam in a funny way, he’s confused just like a teenage girl trying to pick out her outfit for a date. “I don't know this person, the one who avoids a girl because he doesn't know what to say to her. I don't know the guy who is distracted, who worries, who takes chances that are not strictly necessary.” (226). Zadoff,, the author, did a great job expressing the compassion Boy Nobody has for Sam. Zadoff did a great job with this book, I hope the sequel will be out soon because this book is extremely captivating.
Thousand Words by Jennifer Brown
The novel Thousand
Words by Jennifer Brown is about a girl who makes a very wrong decision in
sending out a nude picture to her boyfriend. After the two break up he sends
the photo to one of his friends, who then sends it out to the whole school.
This results in her having to do community service and getting bullied by
people at her school. It also results in her making a new friend, Mack, who
helps her realize her true self.
In this novel, the author creates a melancholy writing
style. Throughout the novel, Ashleigh (the main character) gets bullied a lot
about the photo she sent. This creates the melancholy writing style because it
puts a somber mood over the text. One instance is where a student at her school
calls her out for “looking different.” He has seen the photo and was trying to
make fun of her in front of the school. “’You look good today. Something’s
different, though. What is it?’ … I narrowed my eyes at him, but even I could
feel that my will wasn’t really behind it. I was going for hateful but was
probably only achieving beggary. Please
don’t say anything, please don’t say anything.” Another instance is when Ashleigh
finds out that one of her friends was the one that attached her name and number
to the photo that was going around. Ashleigh is so upset about this and she
doesn’t believe what she’s hearing. “’[Rachel’s] the one who attached your name
and phone number to the text.’ … I didn’t have any words. … My mind whirled. …
I was still humiliated and would still have to face my parents. I would still
have to face everyone at school again eventually.” Through these moments in the
text, the author is able to create a melancholy writing style that makes the
reader feel sympathetic toward Ashleigh.
My favorite scene in the novel is when Ashleigh leads Mack back to the tunnel to write her name on the wall. "I opened my backpack and pulled out a small can of silver spray paint ... Mack didn't say anything, just grinned ... I was not my mistakes. I was not defined by anyone else. Only I got to say who I was. ... I pressed the trigger and drew a big, loopy, celebratory "A"." I really like this part because it is in this moment she realizes the names she has been called don't define her. The author gives the audience a great sense of anticipation in which I thought was an excellent way to end this novel.
I would recommend this book to others. I really enjoyed how
the author would change each chapter form past story telling to present story
telling. It made the novel a lot more suspenseful because you would want to
read on after every chapter to know what happens next in each story telling.
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