Book Predictions: ( I have yet to start reading it. I plan to start this weekend)
I believe that this book will be slightly creepy, but also interesting. I think this because as you flip through the book, you can see pictures of the kids who are at the home, I would assume. The pictures are definitely creepy.
Emma's reading blog
Monday, April 21, 2014
Monday, April 14, 2014
April 14th homework
http://www.cincinnati.com/story/opinion/columnists/krista-ramsey/204/03/20/krista-ramsey-cradle-cincinnati/6676533/1
The main point of this article is being a mother. It is all about how awesome mothers are, and what they can do for the world.
"What we had were loving hearts and a mother bear's instincts." This perfectly shows how amazing mothers are. They had helped a little boy who had lost his own mother. This line is simple yet effective, because it shows how much mothers really have that instinct and love for their children and others children.
Three Questions i would ask her are:
Why did you start writing?
Where do you get inspiration for your articles?
How do you express your voice in your writing?
The main point of this article is being a mother. It is all about how awesome mothers are, and what they can do for the world.
"What we had were loving hearts and a mother bear's instincts." This perfectly shows how amazing mothers are. They had helped a little boy who had lost his own mother. This line is simple yet effective, because it shows how much mothers really have that instinct and love for their children and others children.
Three Questions i would ask her are:
Why did you start writing?
Where do you get inspiration for your articles?
How do you express your voice in your writing?
Sunday, April 6, 2014
what does this work tell us about people? Blog post #2
The authors of one of the books i am reading right now made a choice to have a very defined line between what is good and what is bad in this book. They make it very clear who is evil and who is good. I think by doing this they showed that greedy people are more likely to do bad things or be attracted to bad thing, or evil, or darkness, what ever you want to call it. In this book, the main antagonist is constantly being followed by "tendrils of darkness" as they call it. Basically they are little slimy octopus tentacle like things that follow her around. So by doing this, you can easily tell who is good and who is bad. But back to the idea at hand, I think they make Nefert, the antagonist, bad because she is greedy, and all she wants is power. She is willing to do anything to get that power. If that means she has to kill more than a few people, then so be it. She will not hesitate to trample over you in order to get power., she will do everything within her power just to get more power. Because that's the only thing that really matters to her. She is a greedy, power-hungry, murder. So that is what i think they are trying to suggest about people. Put the option of power in front of a greedy person, they will do anything they can to get it.
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Real life issues in books
A book I have recently started to read is called Revealed. It is part of a series, The House of Night series. Revealed is the 11th book in the series. In this books there is a serious issue between the vampyres and the humans of Tulsa, where the book is set. After the mayor is murdered by the antagonist in the book, the human population start to turn on the vampyre population. The vampyre is much like a vampire, only different rules. The real life issue here, though, is segregation. Although this is between to different species, they were all humans at one point in their life. This is not the big issue in the book, but it is definitely one of the most realistic. Just like in real life, some of the humans do accept the vampyre as equals, but most do not. At one point in the book, Neferet, a rogue vampyre out to take over the entire world, kills the mayor of Tulsa. The mayors wife was never accepting of the vampyres and she is very livid saying that one of the students at the academy killed her husband,when it was in fact Neferet. As she is talking to the police officer and the high priestess of the academy, she says "Thats normal for their kind. My husband was killed by a vampyre. That is not normal!" (Cast 38). As she goes on in the passage she tries to tell everyone that the vampyres should not be trusted and should not be allowed in tulsa. I chose this quote to exemplify the mayors wife's anger with the vampyres and how that anger can be turned into hatred. In the book, the words that are italicized are italicized to put stress on the fact that she is differing herself from the vampyres, almost as if to say 'they are less than us and are savages.'
We saw this happen after the civil war in America with the black population not totally being accepted by the white population. I think that is how the authors, P.C. and Kristin Cast, tried to bring in a real life situation into their writing. We, as readers only really get the side of the vampyre, but as they explain it the humans are becoming not too thrilled to have them in town. I have not read super far into the book, but I believe it is becoming more of an issue to the vampyre and sooner or later the humans will either attack them or do something harmful to the vampyre.
If you are unaware of what happened after the civil war, here is a link that you can go and find out about everything: http://americanhistory.si.edu/brown/history/1-segregated/segregated-america.html
We saw this happen after the civil war in America with the black population not totally being accepted by the white population. I think that is how the authors, P.C. and Kristin Cast, tried to bring in a real life situation into their writing. We, as readers only really get the side of the vampyre, but as they explain it the humans are becoming not too thrilled to have them in town. I have not read super far into the book, but I believe it is becoming more of an issue to the vampyre and sooner or later the humans will either attack them or do something harmful to the vampyre.
If you are unaware of what happened after the civil war, here is a link that you can go and find out about everything: http://americanhistory.si.edu/brown/history/1-segregated/segregated-america.html
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Reading list
so he res a list of some books that i want to read in the future.
Divergent
Room
Unwind
Looking for Alaska
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
The Way of All Fish
The Tiger Shrimp Tango
The Wife, The Maid, and The Mistress
Fake ID
Tell the Wolves I'm Home
In a Glass Grimmly
The Dinner
See Jane Run
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
But I think the next book I am going to read will be either Looking for Alaska or Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
Divergent
Room
Unwind
Looking for Alaska
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
The Way of All Fish
The Tiger Shrimp Tango
The Wife, The Maid, and The Mistress
Fake ID
Tell the Wolves I'm Home
In a Glass Grimmly
The Dinner
See Jane Run
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
But I think the next book I am going to read will be either Looking for Alaska or Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
Book 3 review: Final Exam
The Mortal Instruments series
This book is written in third person, making it easy to see everyone’s point of view, and what is happening at every time. Once you miss something from one person’s point of view, the next chapter goes back a little and shows how that person thinks about all that just happened. Because this book is in third person, it makes it easy to read and follow along with, because you get so many views and you know what is going on, even when the other characters do not really know what is going on. This book being in third person makes it easy and fun to read.
Some of the seemingly harmless people in New York City are actually demons. But demons aren’t real, right? Wrong. Well that’s not the case for Clary; she lived her whole life believing in nothing but what we think, there are no aliens, werewolves, vampires, dragons and so on. But in The Mortal Instruments, by Cassandra Clare, all of those fairytales you were told as a child are true, to some extent of course. This book may be able to be considered realistic fiction, but the story is all over the place, ranging from fantasy to magic realism. It just depends the way you look at the book. It could be considered fantasy because the book makes up a completely new country, Iris. Now this may not seem completely out of the ordinary, but it is. In Iris, there are many clans of werewolves, vampires, fairies, and so on. They call these downworlders, or in simpler terms half humans who were infected with demonic poison to become what they are. In the very begining of the book, when Clary first enters the world of shawdowhunters, jace and his friends were killing a downworlder. "Thats not a person, little girl. It may look like a person and talk like a person and maybe even bleeed like a person. Buts its a monster." (Clare 13) that is how Jace explained the down worlder to Clary for the first time. As you can see they look down on the 'monsters' they encounter.
The plot for the book is very well set, it follows the general outline for magic realism, the main character, typically a girl, discovers something about herself that she did not know, typically she has powers that come from another world not her own, she falls in love with a boy, there will be some complication to their relationship, the girl ends up having to save the world she did not know about previously. I’m not saying there is anything wrong with this; this is usually just the general outline for magic realism. Each individual book has its own way of interrupting this outline, but in general, they all stick to this plot, with a few twists. Any way you look at it, The Mortal Instruments follows this pattern.
Though this book isn’t a sappy love story, it will have you routing for Clary and Jace to work out. The book picks you ups and sucks you in like a vacuum cleaner, only to get out when it gets emptied at the end. The fact that Clary and Jace like each other so much, is so out of the world crazy because they met each other all of five days before something happen between them. That is another thing I find crazy in these stories with love, they take like five days and imply love at first sight. Things happen too fast, not with just the romance, but everything in the book. When one thing happens too fast in the book, everything else gets jealous and starts moving just as fast to keep up. This can make things confusing at some times, but reread it and it should come out clear soon after. Things move too fast in this genre, it needs to slow down and grab a break, or it will get tired too soon.
The way Cassandra made Jace act is really thought out. He’s one of those people who know he has a pretty face, and he uses that. She made him very full of himself, very cocky. Now does he really have the right to be so full of himself? He does. ", Jace still in his bloody shirt with the knife in his hand. He grinned at her and dropped a half-apologetic, half-mocking shrug." 9clare 16) He has a pretty face, or so the text explained, and he uses it to an advantage in more than one case, like in the Seelie court, talking to the queen. He used his face and wittiness to get out of a very bad situation. Cassandra really thought out how Jace was, on a very deep level. He has the face, the attitude, and the act to be a modern day annoying rich kid. Not that there is anything wrong with that, she just made him very relatable on a deep level. It confused me at times, because it’s easy to hate Jace for his cockiness, but it’s also easy to empathize with him for all he has gone through.
This book is written in third person, making it easy to see everyone’s point of view, and what is happening at every time. Once you miss something from one person’s point of view, the next chapter goes back a little and shows how that person thinks about all that just happened. Because this book is in third person, it makes it easy to read and follow along with, because you get so many views and you know what is going on, even when the other characters do not really know what is going on. This book being in third person makes it easy and fun to read.
In conclusion, The Moral Instruments would receive an A+ in my mind. This book was a fun and interesting read, I highly recommend it.
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
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