The special ones, was written by award winning author, Em Bailey. Em Bailey is currently living in Germany but was born in Australia where she previously worked as a new-media designer for children’s television production house, before discovering her love of writing. She has now become a highly respected author and won numerous prestigious awards after her very first novel, shift. Her first novel shift was selected as “notable book” in 2012, and won the Gold Inky for best Australian YA novel. The special ones is centered around a teenage girl who struggles to survive as one of the four young spiritual guides held captive by an unknown cult leader. Em bailey lives in Germany with her daughter and her partner. According to Em Bailey, Some interesting …show more content…
According to Em, “ She was inspired to write the novel due to her fascination of the psychology in cults. She had known that she wanted to write about this theme and how modern technology might affect the way a traditional cult operated.” When she first started writing the novel the special ones, she began Imagining a situation where someone was able to manipulate and control a group of people, but with them not being physically present”(McCallum). Em bailey was drawn to writing young adult novels because of the wide ranging directions that allow for more freedom and various …show more content…
Bailey describes Tess being watched at all times, and being recorded to play the role of “Esther” for her followers similar to a T.V show, and that’s what her followers believe. “Slow considered movements, I remind myself. He is probably watching us right now, and he mustn’t suspect how tense I am” (Bailey,3). The authors use of imagery here allows the reader to clearly visualize Tess’s emotions and even passes through the reader.
“We had chickens in the backyard of our old house… the idea of eating them would’ve horrified me. Now I find myself thinking of all the ways I could use this chicken. The feathers can plump our pillows. The fat can be used for cooking. I’ll grind the bones into a powder for my medicines. Nothing is wasted here” (Bailey,13). Baileys use of imagery here gives the reader a deep insight in the daily life of a modern day cult and the difficulties victims may
A theme that continuously shows in The Screwtape Letters is proving Christianity true by exploring evil. I have chosen letter four, nineteen, and twenty-one to display this theme. In letter four Wormwood is using praying as an evil. He tells Screwtape that his advice to tempt the Patient to keep pray for his mother non-specific and dull, has “proved singularly unfortunate”.
In the young adult suspense novel, Variant, by Robison Wells, a young man named Benson Fisher arrives at Maxfield Private Academy. This school is supposed to be the pinnacle of educational research. What he finds it to actually be, is worse than any nightmare you could dream. Benson falls upon this school through his old school, where he applies for a scholarship to attend Maxfield. He is a foster child and has been moved to 33 different foster homes since the age of five, so the thought of a private school was a beacon for a home at last.
James Maloney’s 1996 novel, A Bridge To Wiseman’s Cove, is a creatively crafted and achingly honest exploration of the transformative power of love that continues to be relevant to young Australians. James Maloney uses the main character Carl to show us some problems that people are facing in their everyday life. James Maloney has creatively crafted this book using figurative language and has wonderfully used a range of other literary devices to explore his characters and themes. His use of imagery, for example, is used frequently throughout the book and is based around water and animals, ‘a black snake ready to pounce…’ (p. 54).
Figurative language is a technique used commonly among authors in literature, yet still something readers have a difficult time figuring out due to the deeper meaning that is hidden in the piece of work. In Zora Neale Hurston’s novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, a minor yet significant character named Mrs. Turner is compared to a pious worshipper, portraying her as someone who is obsessed of one race over another, showing her want of power in society. This ultimately suggests the invisible power in a race and how the color of one’s skin can make differences. Mrs. Turner is an interesting character in this novel. Mrs. Turner is compared to “believers [who] had built an altar to the unattainable -- Caucasian characteristics for all” (Hurston
In the movie “The Station Agent” the writer includes the characters Fin, Joe, Olivia, Cleo and Emily whom are from different backgrounds and cultures. The characters live in a small town named Newfoundland that seems to judge new residents. The five characters start out with completely different lives at the beginning of the movie and find themselves good friends by the end. At the beginning Fin a man with Dwarfism, works in a small shop building trains, he has a love for trains and railroads.
Themes Quotations religion “The nearest approach to decoration was a number of wooden panels with sayings, mostly from Repentances, artistically burnt into them. The one on the left of the fireplace read: ONLY THE IMAGE OF GOD IS MAN.” (Wyndham 18). This quote goes along with the theme of religion because it informs the reader that the main character lives in a house with religious phrases all over the walls to remind him that god's way is the right way and anything unusual such as a mutation defies the way of god and should be burned. “If his legs had been right, he would have stood no taller than my father’s five-feet-ten; but they were not: they were monstrously long and thin, and his arms were long and thin, too.
In Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, there are many meal scenes that could correlate to Foster’s idea of communion whilst dining. This novel is loaded with metaphorical meal scenes, all of which contribute significantly to the story. There are a few important meal scenes though that develop and contribute to the plot more than others. The first of these occurs when Jody decides to open the store and give away free food. The second is when the people of the glades go to Janie’s house for mirth and company.
All the imagery she includes helped the reader receive an excellent understanding of her
There are numerous amounts of techniques authors use in their novels to project a message, and interest the reader. However, certain styles may not work due to the fact that it possibly can result in an overdoing of such style, causing the reader to get bored and stop reading. The novel “Brave New World” by Aldous Huxley Is a novel about developments in reproductive technology, sleep-learning, psychological manipulation, and classical conditioning that come together to change society. This book has a unique science-fiction theme and takes place in the future. Another book called “Alias Grace” by Margaret Atwood is a fictional book based on a true story about a girl named Grace who gets wrongfully convicted of a double murder.
People come into our lives for different reasons. Some leave a positive impact, while others bring negativity. Readers and critics alike have treasured Zora Neale Hurston’s 20th century novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, for generations particularly for its complex portrayal of the different main characters. The people a person meet and the experiences that person many go through in their lifetime can alter a person significantly. Through the tyrannical words of Joe Starks and the inconsiderate actions of Nanny, Janie in the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God is negatively influenced as her actions and thoughts alter her life.
In Judith Ortiz Cofer’s “The Changeling”, the hardships of gender stereotypes are exposed. The contrast between a young girl’s imagination and the reality of her gender role is clear by her attempt to appease her parents. She is neither manly enough to gain the attention of her father nor womanly enough to attain the respect of her mother. Her dilemma of not being able to fit in is emphasized by Cofer’s use of imagery and repetition.
In the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, the protagonist Janie, is influenced by others to change her ideals. Hurston vividly portrays Janie’s outward struggle while emphasising her inward struggle by expressing Janie’s thoughts and emotions. In Kate Chopin’s The Awakening the protagonist is concisely characterized as having “that outward existence which conforms, the inward life which questions,” as Janie does. Janie conforms outwardly to her life but questions inwardly to her marriages with Logan Killicks, her first husband, and Joe Starks, her second husband; Janie also questions her grandmother's influence on what love and marriage is.
As he entered the church people became disturbed. He wanted to see how people would react when he did something he normally wouldn’t do. “The next day, the whole village of Milford talked of little else than Parson Hooper's black veil. That, and the mystery concealed behind it, supplied a topic for discussion between acquaintances meeting in the street, and good women gossiping at their open windows. It was the first item of news that the tavern-keeper told to his guests.
Their Eyes Were Watching God is a detail long fiction tragedy that traces the attitude changes of Janie. As an African American, she denies the social tradition, gender and racial discrimination. The pursuit of true love and independence prompts her to “watch God,” and follow her free will. To begin with, when Janie was a pre-teen girl, she was obviously afraid of the social pressure, the overwhelming gender and racial discrimination.
2. Toby 's Epilepsy and Daphne 's Life in the Asylum in Owls Do Cry Janet Frame 's novel Owls Do Cry tells the story of a New Zealand family who struggles with poverty. Set in the fictional town of Waimaru, the story follows the lives of Bob and Amy Whithers and their children Francie, Toby, Daphne and Chicks. Aside from their monetary struggles the family has to deal with the early death of their daughter Francie (cf.