Ja’Nyah Collins Faith Academy School of Excellence One Crazy Summer By: Rita Williams-Garcia Have you ever wondered what it would be like without a mother? These particular three girls are on a wild hunt for their mother who abandoned them. One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia, explains to us that it was a crazy summer for the three sisters. My important elements are tone and characterization in this adventurous book. The question is, did they ever find their mother? When I read I am able to imagine the things in the story happening, you can feel the emotion, and hear the tone of the reader's voice going to be ahead while you're reading. Yes, the tone is very important through this adventurous book. It's 1968 in Oakland, CA three amazing
Unbroken is about a young Italian boy named Zach, when he came to the u.s. He was a trouble maker. All he did was steal, cause trouble and drink beer, when he drank beer he would put the liquor in a milk jug then color over it with white paint. But in the other hand everyone saw him as a trouble non-listening boy. His brother Cody was a good kid.
Summer Reading Reflection Essay “You saved him!” “You saved him!” the crowd shouted. A book written by Dave Barry called, The Worst Class Trip Ever which is about an eighth grader on a class trip to Washington D.C.
In this world thousands of people are in hunger. Some of the kids who go to school are part of this world hunger because they may only be getting their meals from school. Their lunch may be their last meal of the day. Also the parents who work in restaurants may not make enough money to feed their kids and pay bills. People are in need of food so they are not starving and dying because they cannot eat.
Every story has the one character who may stand out from the group and act slightly different from the rest. They may have some peculiar thoughts, but by the end, they play an important role in developing the plot of the story. In Summerland, by Michael Chabon, the author created Thor Wignutt, the unusual character of the story. At the beginning of the novel, Thor and Ethan Feld and Jennifer T. Rideout aren’t the best of friends. Ethan and Jennifer T. know how intelligent Thor is, and they need him in order to continue to travel between the worlds.
“A group of big-city mayors released a study showing that in 2000, requests for food assistance from families increased almost 20 percent, more than at any time in the last decade. In Quindlen's essay “Schools Out for Summer” she addresses many of the food struggles happening not only in other places but right under our noses. During school months it's much less of a problem because of the students going to school and the food programs. So the question is how many kids during the summer are getting the necessary amount of food. “Fifteen million students get free or cut-rate lunches at school, and many get breakfast, too”.
Have you ever thought of yourself as a person who has the guts to do anything, but in reality when it comes time to actually do something you back out of it? In the book Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand Louis “Louie” Zamperini had partaken in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany. Not long after Louie had competed in the games he had continued on his path to success to join the U.S. Air Forces in 1940, right around when World War II had begun. When Louie and his fellow crew members were flying over the Pacific Ocean in their B-24D Army Air Forces bomber one day in May of 1943, they had crashed into the ocean due to two engine failures. After crashing into the Pacific there were only three survivors; Louie, pilot Lieutenant Russell Allen
YOUR TITLE GOES HERE Anna Quindlen’s essay,School’s Out for Summer manifested the effect that summer break has on hungry children in America. She is effective in the use of persuasion as well as her superb use of real world situations. It supplies exemplary representation of hunger from different perspectives. Quindlen’s essay distinctly explains how and why it is so difficult for kids to be well fed throughout the summer months ,she includes examples that correlate to her argument as well as convincing reasons to support her claims. The main point Quindlen returns to is why it is so difficult for people to feed their children and how the children suffer.
Think of the Children in America Summer is the time when most kids enjoy their free time out of school, and for some kids, summer is the time where they’re not so lucky food-wise. Anna Quindlen, the author of the essay “School’s Out for Summer,” stated that children often were not able to receive the appropriate nutrition during summer because sometimes families do not have enough money to provide nutritious meals as they are served in school. The essay proves, with factual evidence, that, although most people tend to deny the problem, starvation occurs as well in the mighty country of America. Quindlen explained that “During the rest of the [school] year fifteen million students get free or cut-rate lunches at school... but only three million children are getting lunches though the federal summer lunch program.”
I was interested to see how she coped with life after a child’s death. But I feel like I didn’t get a very personal account. The story read more like a written statement than an insightful and reflective interpretation of what happened. Bobbi Gilbert takes you through the series of events paragraph by paragraph, day by day, citing exactly what transpired. This way of writing removed me from the story and I never felt connected to the family the way I would have hoped.
Analyzing “School’s Out for Summer” When the author, Anna Quindlen wrote her essay “School’s Out for the summer”, she had a main purpose to why she wrote it. The purpose to writing such an essay was persuasion, persuasion to fellow American citizens that child hunger does not only exist in places such a Africa, but in our own country America as well. In America, nearly about all of us tune out the fact that child hunger is a major issue within the country, especially during summer. Persuading one’s who don’t realize the situation to open their eyes and help stop this devastating truth little by little. “And some kids don’t get enough to eat, no matter what people want to tell themselves”, stated in the text.
Bruce Watson wrote this book in order to give in detail the story of the savage season of 1964 that made Mississippi burn and made America a democracy. The authors purpose is to share the horrific stories of this summer and tell anyone who will listen what these people really went through. “...forever democrats with a small d, and forever touched by this single season of their youth. But, first they had to survive Freedom Summer. ”(14)
Louie Zamperini went through more pain and suffering than most people will ever endure in their entire life. In the book Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand, Louis Zamperini was an Olympic runner. He was drafted during World War II . During the war, his plane crashed in the middle of the ocean and he was stranded with little resources to survive. This book follows his incredible story battling starvation and abuse in Prisoner of War camps (POW).
Jeepers creepers is a song about a monster who hunts and tries to kill children. I can relate this song to my book because, the monster in my book tried to hunt and kill children as well. One of the main lyrics says “Where’d you get those peepers”? “Where’d you get those eyes”? This relates to the cat in my book.
In this report I will talk about the main ideas/ main points in the book called Sixteen Summer. One of the most important things in the book is when Anna and Will say “I love you,” for the first time. Another important thing in the book is when Will goes to Anna’s family 's party for Fourth of July. They fall more for each other the more they talked at the party. One other thing that is really one of the most important things in the book is when Anna has to say “goodbye” to Will.
The following essay, "A Summer Life", Gary Soto expresses his guilty and impure lifestyle as a six-year-old boy. Soto uses many literary devices during his recreation of an experience he had as a boy to show his guilt and regret; furthermore, he also exemplifies the joy and thrill that his younger self-believed. Soto's use of diction expresses the evils inside him as a six-year-old; though, he uses the device also to show his guilt now as an adult. He wasn't sinful all the time he was driven to it.