The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau is about two kids Lina Mayfleet and Donn Harrow, who fight for survival in hopes to save their city from collapsing and destruction. The city was built because Earth was unsuitable to live in and would destroy all human civilization because natural disasters kept occurring. The City of Ember was built to protect the surviving people with a box timed at the exact date to open with instructions of how to leave in 200 years in the majors hands. Over years of generations of people in Ember, the box gets lost over time and is unable to give it to the next Mayor. It just so happens that Lina is related to the seventh major of Ember and that's when then box with the instructions went missing after he suddenly died. …show more content…
The city is short on food so the people of Ember are skinny, but not for the major. Its suspicious, because the major is more heavier set that everyone else. Doon and Lina find out that he is hording food for himself and causing the people to starve. He is the first major to not discover the secrets of Ember. He abuses his power as mayor and is very mean.
Granny Mayfleet- She is the grandmother to Lina and Poppy. She has her own yarn shop to contribute to Embers society. Lina said earlier in the book that at one point, her shop was tidy and every ball of yarn was in its place, but lately shes been losing it mentally. Slowly, she is becoming crazier and crazier. Because of this, Lina has to be more of a parent role for Poppy because she cant be a caregiver. She is also the reason why Lina found the box, because Granny was tearing up her apartment and it showed up.
Poppy- Poppy is Linas little sister. Poppy is a little trouble maker. When she was out with Lina, she took it upon herself to venture off by herself. Lina is always trying to find her. This is a result of her growing up independent. She isn't a major character, but she is important to Lina. She is one of three who go out into the real
Night and Manzanar Essay Adversity; difficulties and misfortune one might have. Adversity is apart of everyone’s daily lives, it is something that cannot truly be prevented. Two characters from two seperate books, Night by Elie Wiesel and Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki, had many difficulties and obstacles in their way, but they survived. The book Night, by Elie Wiesel is about a young boy named Elie separated from his family during the Holocaust.
The Chicago World’s Fair, also known as the World’s Columbian Exposition, was a world renowned fair hosted by the city of Chicago in 1893. The fair was hosted to glorify the legacy of explorer Christopher Columbus, as the world celebrated the four hundredth anniversary of his discovery of the New World. The events leading up to and during the fair are showcased in precise detail in Erik Larson’s bestseller The Devil in the White City, a nonfiction book written about the World’s Columbian Exposition. Early in the book, the idea to host a fair for Columbus is mentioned.
Both living and dying are both parts of life. In the healthcare field, death can not always be prevented. In Living and Dying in Brick City by Sampson Davis, MD, Sampson. Davis takes the reader to a journey that Davis has experienced.
In the book Night, Elie Wiesel describes his struggles as a Jew in a concentration camp using a depressing and serious tone, meant to reflect the horrific conditions the Jews were forced to face and the theme that adversity can cause a loss in faith. From the time Elie first arrived at the camp and heard everyone saying prayers, to when the young pipel was hung, and even when the Jews had to make the long, arduous, trek to the other camp, the reader could see his faith dwindling as he continued to question where his God was and why he wasn’t helping the Jews. Not only was a lack of faith evident in Elie himself, but the other Jews around him, even the priests, were having trouble believing in their God. Elie’s disheartened and somber tone
Students can face a daily struggle in school, as each one has to study for specific classes to reach a certain goal. Each potential student would then have to choose a goal where he or she would want to reach and, because of that, he or she would push on to escape some item or idea of his or her choosing such as poverty, family or home. Over thirty years ago, Sandra Cisneros published The House On Mango Street, which is a novel made up of vignettes about a little girl named Esperanza and her journey throughout a year’s worth of hardships as a Mexican female. Unlike her mother, she is able to go to school and has the ability to decide what she wants to be and where she wants to go. In the novel, school can be a source of new opportunities through
As reflected in the readings of Reading Popular Culture: An Anthology for Writers 3rd Edition, present-day advertisements expand far beyond the endorsement of a product. While the initial intent for various corporations surround the operation of selling and marketing products, many companies also find success in promoting masked messages. According to Jean Kilbourne in her article pertaining to the study of advertisement, she reveals the underlying tactics of commercialized business. As stated in the article “’In Your Face…All Over the Place’:
Elie Wiesel had a childhood full of adversity. When you’re exposed to so much violence and adversity at such a young age, your lifespan is shorter and you health declines rapidly. Studies show that children who are regularly affected by trauma have undeveloped brains and are more vulnerable to various diseases. Elie and his father were both exposed to violence during the rough times of the Holocaust. Violence made Elie question his faith in God, and made him grow numb to death and adversity.
Sometimes bad things happen in an instant and all you can do is hope that everything will turn out okay. In the book Fever 1793 by Laurie Halse Anderson, Philadelphia experiences a sudden outbreak of yellow fever that affects Mattie in many ways and destroys the town she once knew. Before the plague Mattie worked in her family’s coffeehouse but dreamed of owning her own business in France but because of the raging epidemic, her life and thousands of people's lives change with over 5,000 deaths and constant struggles. Even through times of the worst hardships and suffering, Mattie Cook a young girl takes all of the extreme cases of murder, sickness, and death and turns them into life lessons and maturity.
She is the one that takes charge even when her own son Bailey wanted to make decisions at the end she tend to manipulate him as well. Many things can be shown by the grandmother but as there are many other things that the reader things to find
Dreams, contrary to popular belief, are terrible. The best thing to do, is to stop chasing dreams because all dreams do is distract people from more important responsibilities. People spend their time chasing their dreams, but they don’t perform their day to day tasks they need to survive on their own. In the memoir, The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, Jeannette’s mother, Rose Mary, has a dream of becoming an artist. Instead of getting a job to provide for her poverty stricken family, she decides to stay home and paint all day.
“The City of Ember” has many similarities and differences between film however, the movie was a more entertaining experience. The two brave and strong main characters, Lina and Doon, are assigned each other’s wished jobs on assignment day. After the assembly, Lina and Doon secretly switch their jobs as the next day they go off to each other’s new jobs, Lina as a messenger and Doon as a pipeworks worker. Together, they explore Ember and eventually find a way out in the pipeworks where Doon works. They take Poppy, Lina’s younger sister, and get into a boat made from one of the lockers.
Faith can be very important in a person’s life, but it is often very difficult to hold on to during times of crises. It could help a person a great deal, or it could leave a person weak and in pieces once they lose it. Both Elie Wiesel and Marjane Satrapi experienced the loss of faith and the difficult times following. They described their experiences in their respective memoirs Night and Persepolis. Elie wrote about his experience in several concentration camps during the Holocaust, and the trauma that he both witnessed and felt during that time.
Ember is in big trouble with living in a dystopian society, they will start falling apart, and everything will just start going down hill. The job structure of Ember has some questionable tactics on how it works; the lack knowledge is a upsetting because they barely know anything. The limited resources in Ember keep tearing them down, so the city can not be successful. As you can see, The City of Ember has a very dystopian life, that makes it difficult to
Bobo is a dynamic character, he recognizes that he bullied Amat only because he was older and felt Amat was lower than him because he was poor even though Bobo is lower middle class as well. Bobo goes onto to befriend Amat and protect his friends from the others. Bobo sees how terrible some of the people are the team are and that they hurt people because they don’t see them as equals. William Lyt is a leader on the hockey team who takes over when Kevin is arrested. His parents moved in next to Kevin’s family so that their kids would be best friends and Williams mother is a big part of the fight against Maya and claims she was lying.
The most influential novel that I read this year is The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls. Walls’s memoir had moving themes of strength, perseverance and forgiveness. It also caused me to have passionate reactions. Finally, The Glass Castle impacted me the most because it forced me to reconsider my opinion of homeless people. This novel was a beneficial reading experience.