NAVIGATE |
|
|
MEMBERS |
|
|
SUBJECTS |
|
|
|
Term Papers on Book Reports |
The Last Of The Mohicans
Number of words: 1106 - Number of pages: 5.... reader and allows their imagination to soar. Fred Lewis Pattee expresses his feelings on the use of the setting in “The Historical Romance: Cooper’s ,” when he says:
At every step throughout the romance the reader finds himself in dim, mysterious forests that stretch on every side into the unknown. All of the nameless thrills of a wild life under the open sky sweeps over him. In some mysterious way Cooper makes us feel his environments, and catch to the full all that they hold of mystery and romance. It is a new world that he takes us into, with a language all its own. .....
Get This Paper
|
|
The Great Gatsby: Symbolism In Colors
Number of words: 782 - Number of pages: 3.... " The lamp-light, bright on his boots and dull on the autumn-leaf
yellow of her hair." He is talking about Tom and Jordan Baker, and he is
suggesting that tom might be heading for moral decay. In the book there are
several things that Tom does that might prove this. First of all Tom is having
an affair with Myrtle Wilson. A second thing is that he does not like Gatsby,
and several times he tries to prove that he is not who he says he is. Tom even
hires a detective to prove this. Gatsby had a Rolls Royce that was yellow "His
station wagon scampered like a yellow brisk-bug . . ." .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Frankenstein: Technology
Number of words: 1672 - Number of pages: 7.... she recalls the talk about Erasmus Darwin, who had preserved a
piece of vermicelli in a glass case, till by some extraordinary means it began
to move with voluntary motion," (Joseph vii). The extraordinary means forms the
basis for Frankenstein. Many people also believe that a nightmare that Mary
Shelley had could also be partly responsible for the creation of the novel.
At the time the novel was written, England was on the brink of leading
the Industrial revolution in Europe. The experiments of Huntsman (crucible
steel manufacture), Newcome (steam-powered pumps), and Cochrane .....
Get This Paper
|
|
1984: Summary
Number of words: 1282 - Number of pages: 5.... of a system that is criminal. All
through this book Winston's convictions lead us to believe that he is ethical
and the Party is unjust but it is left up to the readers discretion to decide
whether he is the criminal or just a victim of a totalitarian society. The first
instance of Winstons "criminal" nature was when he bought an illegal journal,
quill and bottle of ink to record his thoughts. Although he had so called
"criminal" thoughts before, the journal seemed to bring out the more daring
ideas in him as to how to get free from the Party's reign. This all indirectly
led to his meet .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Edgar Allen Poe And Nathaniel Hawthorne: Romantic Style Of Writing
Number of words: 1727 - Number of pages: 7.... . Poe also attended West Point Military
Academy for a short time, after his Army stint.
Poe grew very fond of writing and published his first book of
poetry in 1827 at the age of sixteen. Poe is considered one of the first
nineteenth century writers to establish aesthetic principles regarding
short fiction stories as a high art, and one of the forefathers in the
Romantic Movement. Poe stressed the idea of a well developed imagination
through the identification of the characters, and the use of symbolism to
enhance the atmosphere of the story. He used symbols to explain the natu .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Lord Of The Flies: Our Society Suppresses The Evil That Is Presented In All Of Us
Number of words: 723 - Number of pages: 3.... kill pigs. The number of hunters
kept on growing and he began to get other kids to hunt with him. They soon had
a routine (the dance) and whenever they did thad they had to kill, because they
got so pumped up when they did it. Jack then began killing as if it were a
luxury. They became savage hunters as evil took over; they killed almost as if
it were a sexual performance for them.
As this adventure began, Jack was the leader of the choir. He was a
bully who always wanted to be the leader and be looked upon with the utmost
resopect. When Ralph came along as a mild and sensible boy, an .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Racism In Wright's Black Boy
Number of words: 800 - Number of pages: 3.... had the right to beat blacks because of their race. Instead he
assumed that the white man was the black boy's father. When Wright learned that
this was not true, and that the boy was beaten because of his race, he was un
able to rationalize it. Even as he got older he didn't see the color of people.
In one instance Richard and a friend are standing outside a shop when some white
people pass by, Richard doesn't move to accomodate the white people because he
simple didn't notice that they were white.
As a child, Wright ultimately learned to fear white people. However, he
still did .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Catch-22
Number of words: 837 - Number of pages: 4.... to know when Clevinger did not say that he could not be punished. Clevinger quickly rebuts and states, “I always didn’t say you couldn’t punish me, sir.” Finally, the colonel is satisfied with that answer even though Clevinger’s statement did not answer the question and has no meaning. Major Major often spoke with a lack of meaning. He simply did not make sense. For instance, he told Sergeant Towser, his assistant, “From now on, I don’t want anyone to come in to see me while I’m here.” According to this statement, when would anyone be able to see him if they could only .....
Get This Paper
|
|
David Copperfield
Number of words: 1007 - Number of pages: 4.... he moved to Chatham
where he experienced a pleasant childhood in which many scenes from his
childhood are intertwined throughout his novels. Dickens father was constantly
in debt and was eventually sent to jail. This memory was agonizing for young
Charles as years later he wrote: "No words can express the secret agony of my
soul. I felt my early hopes of growing up to be a learned and distinguished man,
crushed in my breast." This directly relates to Dickens discussion of David in
a wine house later in the novel. A couple of years later, Dickens attends
school at the Wellington House A .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Great Gatsby: Theme And Character Anlysis Of Tom And Daisy
Number of words: 979 - Number of pages: 4.... of the future, but that she truly has no idea of what to do with herself. She is like loose change floating around wandering from party to party, man to man, friend to friend, in a big house in East Egg with no sense of purpose. She once attempted to plan something when she first reunited with Nick. She said, "What'll we plan? What do people plan?" meaning she has never had to make decisions nor has she had much responsibility. Not only does she have no purpose, she has no morals. She literally killed a woman and went home to eat cold chicken. What more, her lover was killed and she left on .....
Get This Paper
|
|