In “The Other Wes Moore” Wes Moore, the author, and Wes Moore, the eventual murderer, make different decisions that ultimately determined their destiny. Wes Moore, the author, made many valuable decisions, of these the most crucial choose that he made was choosing to stay at Valley Forge Military School. For the first few days of Military School Wes wanted nothing to do with it, He hates the idea of being away from everyone he knew, and always being told what to do. He even admits to trying to run away a few times. In spite of this after the first year was said “I’d actually started to enjoy Military School.” (Moore, 115) Military School had significantly impacted Wes more than he ever imagined. Wes says “Years earlier, I had run through these
What would you do if you learned that someone lived only a few blocks away from you, enduring identical names and the same fatherless childhood, yet ended up on disparate lives? The other Wes Moore was a convicted felon and murderer serving a life sentence in a federal prison, while the author Wes Moore was a honorable and respectable army officer and Rhodes Scholar; so the author Wes Moore proceeded to attain the key to the question in The Other Wes Moore. After several letter exchanges and prison visits, the two Wes Moores formed a deepening relationship. During this time, the author Wes Moore realized that the other Wes Moore had had a similar childhood to his. The two African American boys grew up fatherless and residing in Baltimore, Maryland,
“The Other Wes Moore” is a true story, written by Wes Moore about how he and another kid with the same name ended up with two extremely different fates. Both Wes`s lived in the same area, grew up without fathers, had a difficult childhood and both got in trouble with the law for being involved with the wrong crowd in the streets. The Two both also were raised by single mothers who influenced their lives extremely. Wes found out about the other Wes and began to visit him in prison. Wes Moore wrote this book because he realized that the fate of the other Wes could’ve easily been his.
Wes Moore The other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates by Wes Moore is about two boys with the same last name who take two very different paths. Wes Moores grow up without a father figure, however, the author Wes Moore’s father Westley passed away due to acute epiglottitis whereas other Wes Moore’s father Bernard was an alcoholic and never around. (Both of the Wes Moores also lived in the Bronx, which had a heavy influence for drugs and crime.) In spite of several setbacks, the author Wes Moore was able to become successful, the other Wes Moore was a failure and spent the rest of his life behind bars.
The phrase “through pain, comes discipline” may sound strange or even unorthodox to the average person, but to someone who has stepped on the yellow footprints at Parris Island, they might beg to differ. It was an intense first night on the island to say the least; about 60 of us or so packed on a small bus that was well over capacity, and the fear could be sensed in us all. I remember the long silence finally being broken by a drill instructor’s polite words to “get the hell off his bus”, after those kind words were said we all did in fact get off of his bus; where I was greeted by the humid and cool November air of South Carolina; to this day I can still smell the swamps that surround the Island. They say that anyone who does decide to step on those yellow footprints fall under one of two categories: those that are “crazy brave” and those that are “phony tough”. In hindsight I can safely say that I was the latter of the two, but there was a lesson to be learned on that island for everyone there, and for me it was a lesson in humility.
In the The Things They Carried, the emotions are more than just a mental problem, they become life changing conflicts. The author of this book is Tim O’Brien. Tim O’Brien is the main character throughout the whole book. In the beginning of the book, The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien goes in depth describing what each of the men carried with them. He started with actual things having to deal with war, then talking about the emotional burdens the men carried.
Introduction: We as a society face many issues. Due to our diversity as a country, the values and beliefs of one culture battle against another. II. We must address the current standing issues that we face, but before we can do that, we must understand them.
Many people, like the author Wes Moore, have made decisions that have put them into Valley Forge Military Academy. The first and main decision that will affect Weses life forever was not made by him, but for him. Weses mother, Joy, had just gotten a call about his poor efforts in school and attending school. Wes also accidentally punches
“Trainees!” He said. It was the Head Rector. “I am appalled! I warned you about these outsiders and their dangerous ideas.
The setting needed to take place in Devon, it also needed to occur during the war. The boys are being prepared for this war and to be enlisted into it. Without the war there would be no point to train them or prepare them for this, they would have no reason for these lessons, they could be taught like any other school and any other class. It needed to take place at Devon because of the structure of the school that the author describes. The tree above the river and the war prep at the school are important to the plot of the story.
How Princeton High School is the Same and Different from Devon School in A Separate Peace by John Knowles Imagine living in a school where all you can look forward to is being drafted into a war. The attitude of that school may be different to the school that students are obtaining their education in today. The Devon school in A Separate Peace by John Knowles shows exactly what a school during a war is like. During the second world war, the Devon school’s attitude was much different to what a school is seen as today.
“Because my war ended before I ever put on a uniform; I was on active duty all my time of school; I killed my enemy there” (Knowles, 204). A Separate Peace, written by John Knowles, was taken place at Devon High in the mid 1940’s, in the New England area during WWII. The main character, Gene, is a very smart, but envious and imitative kid that returns back to his school later in life to find peace within himself and past conflicts. Gene’s envious and imitative actions have had many affects within himself, others, and his future, but has found peace throughout everything. Gene’s envy and imitation of Finny affects him a lot throughout the novel.
The two Wes Moore’s may have had similar, towns, friends, and family, but there were some key differences in their lives that caused their paths to diverge as they did. To begin with, both grew up in similar locations. They mostly lived in what is called the “projects,” places where destitute families lived. It is also where gang members and drug cartels thrived. This environment had a similar effect on both, but where one chose to embrace and thrive in the local crime, the other stayed away from most of it.
As Gene explores his old school grounds, he reminisces on the events that happened at the tree by the creek. He recalls that “...this was the Summer Session, just established to keep up with the pace of the war... The class above, seniors, draft-bait, practically soldiers, rushed ahead of us toward the war. They were caught up
My first thought when I think of JROTC are; responsibility,teamwork,and leadership. A lot of people think JROTC is bad and think they wouldn’t like the class but as the years or days go on some start to like the class. The purpose of JROTC is to motivate young people to be better citizen. JROTC can teach you a lot throughout like such as responsibility and leadership. I personally think JROTC is to educate high schoolers and other young people in the world.
Erich Maria Remarque was a man who had lived through the terrors of war, serving since he was eighteen. His first-hand experience shines through the text in his famous war novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, which tells the life of young Paul Bäumer as he serves during World War 1. The book was, and still is, praised to be universal. The blatant show of brutality, and the characters’ questioning of politics and their own self often reaches into the hearts of the readers, regardless of who or where they are. Brutality and images of war are abundant in this book, giving the story a feeling of reality.