Friday, December 13, 2013
Friday, December 6, 2013
Literary Anaysis #2
1. In Stephen King’s book,
The Shining, it’s about Jack Torrance, his wife Wendy, and their son
Danny. Jack who is a former alcoholic gets a job as a winter care taker of an
isolated hotel named Overlook, down in the Colorado Mountains. He takes Wendy
and Danny with him, thinking he could start his life anew to get away from his alcoholic
and abusive past. Danny who’s clairvoyant and has telepathic powers, sees dark
things inside the haunted hotel. The hotel influences people in a bad way; Jack
is no exception. Throughout the story you see Jack lose his mind and jeopardize
his family, and himself.
2. The
theme of this book is about malevolent spirit, because the spirit terrorizing
the hotel killed his family and himself. Then tries to recreate the horrific
event with Jack and his family.
3. I
chose this book because I’ve read books by Stephen King before and I thought
they were well written so I bought the book thinking it would also be good.
What appealed to me at first was the cover, it had a door room 217 with light
shining out and I thought it looked interesting. Nothing about the book made me
want to keep reading, I found it tedious and not chilling like the reviews had
said it was, but I still finished to say I finished it.
4. I
didn’t find it realistic because, I don’t believe a malevolent spirit would
invade a body just to recreate the same violence it did before. I didn’t make
any connections from the book to my life since I don’t know any alcoholic writers,
nor do I know any children who are clairvoyant.
5. The
author’s tone is suspenseful and dark.
-Suspense is showed on p.538
“…but she had never envisioned herself prowling halls and staircases like a
nervous felon, with a knife clasped in one hand to use against Jack”
-Suspense comes up again on
p.539 “Heart thumping, she went to the open ballroom doors and looked in”
-Dark can be observed on p.12
“He killed them, Mr. Torrance then committed suicide”
6. The
literary elements I found were the following:
-Allusion, p.370 “Those were properly Byzantine, as
benefitted the royalty…And capos who had stayed there over the years” it refers
to the ancient Roman empire Byzantine.
- When Hallorann asks again “Are
you sure you don’t want to go to Florida with me?” that’s Foreshadowing something
bad to come, by him asking many times if he wanted to leave the hotel shown on
p.125.
- “Not real! False face....Take off
your mask” says Danny on p.624. That is a metaphor because the person he yelled it at wasn’t
wearing a mask, but he wasn’t acting like himself”
- Imagery can be seen on p.226 “It was rich
and creamy, dominated by a raised engraving of the overlook with every window
alight”
- On p.125 “Yes he said, thinking
of the story of Bluebeard” that is an Allusion to the book Bluebeard.
-An Allusion is shown when The Masque of the Red Death
is referenced. “The red death held sway over all” p.227
-On p. 183 Figurative Language is used “But Wendy felt
a cold finger touch her heart”.
- “Could you be expected to behave
as a thinking human being when your hand was being impaled on red-hot darning
needles” p.157 that shows Imagery.
-
“Your nose is running like a fire hose” p.145 which demonstrates a Simile.
-“They felt like rocks on the end of his arms" p.394 demonstrating a simile.
Characterization
1. -Direct
characterization- p. 12 “Wendy is an extraordinary person” Jack states. Someone
is directly saying how Wendy is.
-Direct
Characterization p.344 “That all come back to this she and her drunkard
husband” it’s directly saying Wendy’s husband is a drunk.
-Indirect
characterization p.544 “God looks after drunks and little children” that’s indirectly
talking about Jack.
-Indirect
characterization “oh you dirty liar” Wendy thinks to herself about her
husband. She’s not directly saying it aloud but to herself.
2. Yes,
the author changes tone when speaking of different characters. When speaking of
Jack he speaks negatively, and curses a lot. Jack Torrance thought: Officious
little prick. When speaking as Wendy he speaks in a depressed matter, and a lot
of times scared. He doesn’t speak of Danny in any certain way.
3. The
protagonist is Jack a dynamic flat character, because Jack is always angry and abusive
and even though he may have a short moment of remorse.
4. I
didn’t feel like I read or met a person in the story clearly.
Enduring
Memory
One
thing I will remember from reading this book is how Jack was a tortured angry
man. Whether he was influenced by a malevolent spirit, effected by the
alcoholism, or damaged by his past abusive childhood. The fact remains he was
messed up.
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Task Three: Preparing Your Home
In Max Brooks's non-fiction Zombie Survival Guide he wrote a certain passage entitled "Preparing Your Home", he states how you should prepare your home before the dead rise. The author supports his claim by steps on how to prepare your home, with modifications such as: putting up a fence around the home (at least 6-foot), put bars on the window, tempered safety glass etc... If you happen to live in an apartment complex you should barricade the stares and fist floor, and live on the second floor or higher. The author next proceeds to show you need supplies/equipment and what type, pistols, shotguns, gasoline, canned food, just to name a few. "Numbers should be adjusted on the number of people in the group", Brook states. Finally the author opines that you need to learn to survive an attack. A designated latrine should be in your backyard, and if weather an nature allows, you should have a vegetable garden, as a ready source of food. Brooks states "Many tasks will have to be accomplished and repeated for survival in a confined space."
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Task one: Survival Basics
In Ali Khan's non-fiction article "Preparedness 101: Zombie Apocalypse", he states that you should and how to prepare for a zombie apocalypse and/or a real disaster. The author supports his claim by explaining what should be in your emergency kit, such as: water/food, medications, tools and supplies, clothing/bedding, sanitation/hygiene, and a first aid supplies. The author then proceeds to show that an emergency plan is necessary during a disaster. An emergency plan should identify the emergencies in your area, your family and yourself should have two meet up places, have emergency contacts, and more importantly an escape route. Finally the author avers that the CDC will assist those in need, finding a cure, detaining the diseased, and finding out how it's transmitted. "If zombies did start roaming the streets, CDC would conduct an investigation much like any other disease outbreak" (Khan).
http://blogs.cdc.gov/publichealthmatters/2011/05/preparedness-101-zombie-apocalypse/
http://blogs.cdc.gov/publichealthmatters/2011/05/preparedness-101-zombie-apocalypse/
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)