Friday, December 21, 2007
Last post...
heyyyy
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
In the beginning of this novel called Inexcusable ,Keir and his girlfriend Gigi Bondikan fights. There fight seem interesting but you don't know what they are fighting about. Gigi slaps and punches Keir and calls him bad names. So they breakup. But when you read this book towards the middle of it you see that Keir and Gigi go out to eat and talk after their prom. Keir is so kind to her because Gigi feet hurt from walking in her heels so Keir helped her took off her shoes and when inside he restaurant. The waitress was mean, she told Gigi to put her shoes back on because that was against the rules of the restaurant. Gigi didn't listen so there was this conflict with this waitress and Gigi. So the waitress kick them out. I can see how this part of the story looks like. I think that Gigi is a type a girl who don't care about what people say to her like if they talk to her in a mean way. That's how I am. I think I can relate Gigi and me. But Keir tells Gigi do she love him and she says no that she likes him only as a friend. I think that Gigi do love him she don't want to admit it. I don't know why she said no when he ask that simple question to her. I think they should go back out. Keir is a nice person. Probably more into the chapters they will go out and eventually fall madly in love and get married.
The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold, Chapters 10-14
The second character i can relate to is Susie's sister Lindsey. She doesn't know exactly how to deal with her older sisters death. If any one of my two sisters died, I wouldn't know how to deal with it either! Especially if I found out my sisters were murdered. I would go out every day and night to try and find their killer! But at the same time, I would be hurting inside, like Lindsey, and keeping to myself, because I wouldn't know how to deal with the pain either.
hi
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
hey
hi
Inexcusable
Keir is this novel is loving and caring. He says and I believe it that good boys don't do anything bad.He lives with his father which his name is Rey. His father gives him lots of things. Keir and his father bond a lot. They play the game of Risk and they compete at who is going to own which land on the game board. Mary and Fran are his older sisters who are in college already and wants Keir to follow their footsteps in life. Rey, Keir and Keir's sisters father don't care about Mary and Fran. This can be a problem because his sisters probably think that their so called nice father is treating Keir right. But Keir loves his father. He thinks everything is going great with his father not like his mother treated Keir but Rey is a good father to me I think.
Thursday, December 13, 2007
The Allure of the West
Friday, December 07, 2007
part 2
hey again
hiii
Thursday, December 06, 2007
The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold, Chapters 1-9
(This is in responce to the second bullet under conflict.)
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
Into the Wild, Jon Krakauer Pages: 1-144
is pretty alienated. It's a nonfiction book, and since I haven't
summed it up yet in a previous response, it's about a kid who is
searching for meaning in life and seeks this meaning by exploring.
At the beginning of the book we find out that he ends up dying in the
middle of Alaska to exposure.
Even though I think I'm supposed to, I'm having a really hard time
identifying with the main character, Chris McCandless. I look at
the cover and there's this picture of Emile Hirsch portraying
McCandless. He's a good looking kid, and he's kind of sitting in this
"top of the world" type dominant pose. The author seems to really
identify with the character, and spends a couple of chapters relating
his own similar experiences. And McCandless is seemingly the rugged,
individualistic antihero that Americans celebrate.
But, I can't get into him, and I think it's because I'm a parent
now. I see the way this kid abandoned his parents, went off into the
middle of nowhere, took chances, didn't write home, and espoused his
theories on the way life works to whomever would listen, and I'm
like, "dude...call your mom, dad and sister. They're worried sick."
The kid is kind of portrayed as this spiritual, deep Thoreau quoting
prophetic figure, but he just strikes me as naive and self centered.
I don't know what I'd do if I was his parent. I would be devastated
if my son took off after graduating college and just disappeared.
It's really rather sad.
(By the way, if you're wondering, this response is to the 7th bullet
under character. The total length of this response is 279 words. I
summed up the book to start because I figured you'd need that
information, but then I really tried to stick to talking about
whether or not I identified with the main character and why.)
Tuesday, December 04, 2007
Hello
Monday, December 03, 2007
One thing I like about the book is the tone the author uses and the suspense she builds. She give s the book so much life by the details she uses. She makes you feel like it happened to you or like your in the story because you can visualize everything she describes due to the vivid details she uses!
Your 1st Post!
first post will be a kind of introductory thing. Here's what I'd like each
of you to write (make sure it is under your own display name):
1. In 2-3 sentences, give us a taste of the book. What is the title? Who
is the author? What is the "gist"? (It's about a girl who...)
2. In a separate paragraph of 2-3 sentences, finish this sentence: One
thing I like (or don't like) about the book so far is...