Heroic Journey The book that was read was Andrew Smith’s “100 Hundred Sideways Miles”. This book describes the journey of Finn Easton, an epileptic teenager, and his struggles. The Heroic Journey is a pattern of narratives that tends to show up in stories and myths. It is seen in this book through Finn’s internal struggles trying to find meaning in life outside of his father’s book which had incorporated characteristics of him. The book 100 Sideways Miles best represents the Hero's Journey through the elements of refusal of the call, meeting the mentor, and resurrection. One aspect of the Hero's Journey shown in this book is the refusal of the call. The underlying issue in this book is that Finn cannot find his identity outside of his father’s book “The Lazarus Door”. After Julia Bishop, a girl that had just recently moved into Finn’s neighborhood, had seen him after one of his epileptic episodes, he “...backed away from the railing and shut himself inside his bedroom.” (pg. 60) After this particular episode of …show more content…
The final test for Finn occurs on his journey to visit Dunston University in the state of Oklahoma. On his way there, Finn and Cade saved a man and his son’s life from drowning in a river. Finn even says that the governor came to their school to “present Cade Hernandez and me with official commendations for being such heroes and saving two peoples (and one dog’s) lives in Oklahoma (pg. 275). This event causes Cade and Finn to rethink their trip to Dunston University and instead causes them to visit Julia Bishop in her home at Chicago. This detour must be made before Finn returns home because he loves Julia and was devastated when she moved back to Chicago. This ended up being well worth it when “I [Finn] stepped out of the book and into Julia’s arms” (pg. 273). This last meeting with Julia fulfilled him and Finn was able to return home without any
Things keep getting harder for Finn. It 's hard for her to see Chloe 's mom sit there and worry, it 's hard for Finn just to sit there and watch the city drain the lake looking for chloe 's body when she knows they aren 't going to find anything. Finn sneaks off to her grandma’s house and tells Chloe “Chloe, we need to end this now.
In A Mighty Long Way the author, Carlotta Walls LaNier writes about her experiences growing up in Little Rock, Arkansas. She focuses a lot on her family and those who helped her, she also writes about the differences between white schools and black schools. The latter half of the book focuses onward from the point she enrolled into Central High School (CHS) and beyond in her life. The integration of black students into CHS was a long road filled with hateful individuals, ignorant individuals, and students who just wanted to learn. The name of the book refers to her graduation, she says that she had "come a mighty long way" in order to get to her graduation from CHS (Chapter 12).
In this riveting story about two friends doing what they love. They experience loss and redemption to get themselves out of many situations. Finnie along with many others suffer many great losses. One thing many people admire about Finnie is his ability to redeem himself and turn a bad situation into a good one. Loss is often viewed as a bad thing, it can lead to many sad/scary feelings and emotions.
Finny leaves school to recover and the summer session ends. The school year starts and Finny is still healing. Gene comes by to visit and tries to confess to pushing Finny out of the tree, but Finny doesn’t want to believe that and tell him to
Children back then had a lot of ignorance just like Finn. They didn’t think it was a bad thing to treat black people so horribly, they thought that it was perfectly normal. This book is about a young boy named Huck who has been taught as a young boy to despise black people without no experience. One day
Main Character Finely Jacobs, also known as Finn, was a sixteen year old who lived on a small town, named Colt River, New Jersey. Finn lived on the countryside of Colt River so she usually dressed in overalls, nothing fancy. Occasionally she would dress up, but this was a rare event. When Finn would dress up both her parents got excited and took pictures of her. Finn is characterized as a charming girl who constantly compares herself to her best friend, Chloe.
Finny takes some of his school friends to a tree that is located next to the river, its branches extending over the river. He then opts to climb up the tree and jump into the river. He influences the main character, Gene, to engage as well. Finny then explores the fantasy of a brotherhood by creating the “Super Suicide Society of the Summer Session”. The author expands on it in the book by saying, “Schools are supposed to
Life is an adventure of hope and chance but when we take an unexpected turn it can be hard to get back onto the right path. On page 2 it says he had failed just as many kids will after he had passed, this enlightens in the reader's eyes that many kids and adults have roadblocks in their lives that stops them from accomplishing them from their dreams. On page 3 it says that he would have changed to be an astronaut for anything which shows that many people would give anything for their dream but it is just out of reach. When you follow your heart it can cause much agony or can cause much happiness. Human error causes us to make mistakes in our life, so we need to expect the unexpected in the future so we can make less mistakes.
What is right and wrong? How should I live our lives and treat those around us? These are some of the basic questions that every human has to wrestle with throughout their life. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is a book that deals with that struggle. From a first glance, the story is about a mischievous boy who runs away with a slave named Jim down the Mississippi river.
The story of Huckleberry Finn is one of slavery, adventure, and racism. It tells the story of Huck Finn and his companion, the escaped slave, Jim. On a homemade raft they escape their town downriver in search of the money to pay to free Jim's family, and any sort of adventure for Huckleberry Finn. This book combats slavery and shows through Huck Finn's own experience that people can change from their preconcieved notions about others, and combat their views on slavery. It acknowledges all of the stereotypes Americans had at the time, and showcases a time in American history that many would rather look away from.
Lyliana Arellano Mr. Whyte ERWC, P.6 10 April 2017 Research Paper I am to apply Joseph Campbell’s 17 Stages of the Hero’s Journey to Albert Camus’s The Stranger, George Orwell’s 1989,and Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild. Albert Camus’s The stranger contains a strong fullness of Camus’s philosophical notion of absurdity. George Orwell’s 1984 is a political novel written with the purpose of warning readers in the West of the dangers of totalitarian government.
They spend their days participating in various sports and leaping off of gigantic trees. However, their relaxing summer takes a drastic turn when Gene’s jealousy of Finny leads to Finny falling out of a tree and breaking his leg. When Finny returns to the school after the accident , the fun of the summer has now ended and has been replaced with the harsh work and stricter rules of the winter session. Finny
From the beginning of Mark Twain’s Huck Finn the reader is rapidly brought into the entertaining life of a young boy Huck Finn. Throughout the novel Twain describes in a humorous way the trials and tribulations Huck faces. Although they book has its comedy, serious topics are intertwined throughout the novel. One key piece of literature that shows this serious but comedic theme is “there warn’t no home like a raft” (Twain 155).
The Heroes Journey, identified by American scholar Joseph Campbell, is a pattern of narrative that describes the typical adventure of the main hero, whether that be a fiction or nonfiction hero. The first step is the call to adventure, where something shakes up the hero’s current situation and the hero starts experiencing change. Consequently, this theory is also applied to the fictional hero Odysseus in The Odyssey and the real-life hero Martin Luther King Jr., a civil rights activist. In The Odyssey, Odysseus embarks on a 10-year voyage from Troy to Ithaca and encounters many monsters along the way including a gigantic Cyclops described as “…a brute so huge, he seemed no man at all…” (9 89-90).
The alert reader of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn must not only appreciate the complex ethical challenges Huck faces, but also evaluate whether Huck himself is moral. Throughout the whole novel, Huck remains forced to make many decisions based on his moral values. Dealing with his abusive father and deciding whether he should continue helping Jim escape arise as some of the main problems Huck faces. The way he handles those problems ultimately exhibits Huck as a morally bold protagonist of the novel.