Book Discussion


The purpose of this blog is to discuss the books you are reading in a way that will make others want to read them too. The blog allows for a more in-depth description of the book and how it relates to today. It should include the literary elements of the book, the symbolism and a brief description of the plot.

If you read a biography, begin with a brief overview of the book, then describe the different stages of life. When possible, relate the person to historical events, describe the person's character strengths and any obstacles the person overcame.

Monday, May 31, 2010

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

Anne Frank's family lived in the Netherlands to be away from all that was going on in Germany. However Germany invaded the Netherlands and they had to hide along with another family because they were Jewish. In the beggining of the book it seemed like she just lived the typical life of a little girl however she did have to go to a special school just for Jewish people when they lived in germany because of a law. Her life quickly changed from being normal to living a life in fear. They lived above Otto Frank's office in a small room stockpiled with food and other supplies. Living in the annex Anne felt much solitude although she was with other people she did not feel much love or care from them. However she really connected with a youjng man named Peter even though her parents do not approve of there relationship. Anne is thirteen years old at the time this all begins and doesn't really understand why the Jewish people are being singled out. Towards the end of the book Anne seemed to see herself more as a writer and wrote more about what was happening in the War rather then what was going on with her. This book shows how hard it was to live in the war. Anne had many struggles and lived in saddness, fear, and even gult. When nothing was really her fault she still felt guilt for what was going on around her. This was just meant to be a little girls diary at first but changed into showing the world what really happened to the Jewish people living in the area that Hitler controlled during the war.

The Ancient Ship by Zhang Wei; posted by Jack Jones

The book I read was The Ancient Ship By Zhang Wei. This is a Historical Fiction novel following the lives of the people of the small fictional village of Wali, China. More specifically, the novel follows the stories of the Sui, Zhao, and Li families that occupy the village. The story takes place right after the creation of the Peoples republic of China and Mao's rise to power. Mao's actions are illistrated through the eyes of the people of Wali, uncovering an interesting point of view on early communism in China and the cold war. The people of Wali receive only bits of news from the Western world. The hear about U.S. and Russian Space travel and all about the U.S. side in the cold war, but all through an extreme communist filter of which they do not know about nor understand. The townspeople are oppressed and their story shows the history of China and their communist regime.
The book demonstrates the cluelessness of the people of the more rural parts of China and their suseptability to manipulation. The people are forced to beleive rumors about the U.S. which causes them to side with their communist leader and further allow for the spread of communism which the U.S. so diligently tried to stop. The author uses anecdotes to relate the people back to the actual history of China and the cold war era. He also tries to demonstrate the tension between China and the western Nations, and even the U.S. presedents.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Hitler: The Last Ten Days

Hitler: The Last Ten Days – An Eyewitness Account by Gerhard Boldt is just what the title says, an eyewitness account of the last ten days of Adolf Hitler’s life. We see these last ten days through the eyes of Gerhard Boldt, a cavalry officer and Senior-Lieutenant with the 58th infantry division on the East front during World War II. Boldt starts by showing us what a briefing in the Reich Chancellery with Hitler was like. He listens as many generals walk up to Hitler terrified, and tell their leader what is going on in the war. Hitler seems to be deteriorating. He appears to be exhausted and weak, and he is getting crazier by the minute. He had his mind set on what he was going to do, and no one could change his mind. No one had any good ideas except for him, he thought.
After a long briefing, Boldt flashes back to the beginning of the war; he lets the reader see his life. He explains the hoops he jumps through and the injuries he acquired while trying to get to the top. By the end of his war-life story, he is sent to the Fuehrer’s staff at Army High Command. On Hitler’s staff is where he observes him from a closer view.
As the book goes on, Boldt is called to briefing sessions daily. He sees that Hitler is getting worse by the second. He was brooding, as anyone would expect, and on drugs. Here is one of the greatest leaders in the world, with only a soft grip on reality and he is leading a world into war. In July of 1944, an attempt was made to assassinate Hitler. This, of course, made Hitler furious. It only made him angrier at the world. Because of this attempted assassination, he arrested 5,000 people and 200 more were executed. At one point, Hitler ordered the Berlin subways to be flooded to hold the Russians back for a few more hours, even though he knew that many of his people had taken shelter in those subways. Later, as his country was falling to pieces, Hitler and his new wife, Eva Braun, sat there drinking in celebration to their new marriage and to the new world of hate and prejudice he had created among his people. On the 30th of April, 1945, the day after these two married, Eva and Hitler said their last goodbyes to the staff and headed into the study. Later that day, witnesses heard a gunshot from the study. Both were dead. Hitler had a gunshot wound in the head, and was dripping blood all over the couch. Braun, however, didn’t seem to have any wounds. She is believed to have poisoned herself.
It is interesting to see the Second World War from the eyes of a Nazi. The war seems so different in the eyes of an American soldier, or in the text of an American History book, than from the eyes of a German Nazi. Some people often look at Nazis as if they were horrible people—though most were—but the fact of the matter is, those soldiers were people, too. They had a passion for their country. They were told and taught different things, but in essence, they were still soldiers. It was also interesting to see that many people disagreed with their Fuehrer, but were too afraid to speak up because they knew what he could do to them and the people they loved.

Charles Lindberg by Taylor Damrow

Charles Lindbergh was an American aviator, author, inventor, explorer, and social activist. He spent the majority of his childhood residing in Detroit, Michigan. Lindbergh pursued the career in aviation and became a US Mail pilot. At the age of 25 Lindbergh emerged from the shadows of a normal American citizen life when he was struck with instant fame after a solo flight across the Atlantic. The mission consisted of a one way flight from New York to Paris. This feat had never been achieved before Lindbergh did it firsthand. Many thought he was too inexperienced for his age to complete the mission, but he proved everyone wrong on May 21, 1927 with his plane “The Spirit of Saint Louis”. He turned into a household name overnight, some referring to him as “Lucky Lindy” and “The Lone Eagle”.

Lindbergh put his fame to use, promoting the advancement and development of aviation as a whole. Unfortunately, his fame brought great sorrow to himself and his family. In 1932 Lindbergh’s infant son was kidnapped and murdered. The Lindbergh’s fled to Europe as a result to the hardships in which they had endured. However Lindbergh and his family returned once again to the United States after the surprise attack of Pearl Harbor. Lindbergh was an outspoken advocate of keeping the U.S. out of world conflicts. Even with the resentment of being involved in a world war, Lindbergh carried out many combat missions in the Pacific Theatre as a civilian consultant, because the president wouldn’t allow Lindbergh to be reinstated. Charles Lindbergh was an icon of the 20’s and 30’s expressing his talents in many forms.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Annie's Promise

Annie's Promise by Sonia Levitin is a very good read!It is 1945 and Annie's family and herself have moved out of Germany because of the Nazis. The left because of Hitler and her family is Jewish. When they come to America they realize many things are different and have to adjust. Annie is very different from her sisters, she had an illness and her parents are very protective. They don't want her to do anything. Also she is not a girly girl. Annie really wants to see what life holds for her, but her parents are holding her back in doing so. Her guidance counselor from school confronts her one day and tells her she has been invited to Quaker Pines Camp. She asked her parents and at first they said no, but finally they caved in and allowed her to go. When she first arrived at camp she knew no one, but befriended a girl named Tally. Tally and Annie became really good friends over the summer. Annie ha some troubles during her time at camp with people and tasks. She was enjoying her time though. Annie was a natural with horses and people. Many liked her and found her intelligent. When camp was over Annie went home to knew things. Her sister left the house and she was alone with her parents. Annie was given the opportunity to return to camp as a counselor. Tally came to visit Annie and they had a grea time but when Annie's parents found out she was hanging with a black girl and where she was they were outraged. They said profane words and made Annie very upset. She snuck out to go to camp that night. She arrived at camp and it wasn't the same. It was scary and vacant. She only stayed for a while then realized she missed home. The day she went back to camp as a counselor the war was over. The Americans had dropped the bomb. It was a new beginning for all. His book is great. It shows people all the history and the lives people had back then. It also captures the true essence of a young girl during this time. It still is relevant to the wold today. We have wars going on currently and people are suffering. Not all are in the war, but have family over there. Many people suffer when there is a war and the book shows this.

The Truth Behind Death at Columbine By: Brooks Brown and Rob Merritt

The Truth Behind Death at Columbine is the true story of Columbine. The story is told by Brooks Brown. The two shooters at Columbine were Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris and Brooks Brown was their best friend. So this story is told by the shooters’ best friend and how he had no idea what was going on and all the signs that were completely missed. Columbine was the worst murder that occurred at a school in U.S. history. Dylan and Eric shot to death 12 students, 1 teacher, and wounded many others. The day of the shooting Brooks noticed that Dylan and Eric were not in school. It was pretty common for Eric to miss school but if Dylan was gone, Brooks was normally with him. But that day, he wasn’t. After school Brooks saw Eric drive up and park his car in the parking lot. He went over and asked him where he was all day and if he knew where Dylan was. Eric got out of the car with a big duffle bag said to Brooks, “Get out of here. Go home”. Brooks was confused but did what he said. As he was walking home he heard loud noises coming from school. He soon figured out it was gun shots.
Dylan and Brooks had been friends since first grade. They grew up together and when they got to middle school Eric moved to town and the 3 of them became inseparable. Brooks and Dylan were made fun of a lot growing up in school. People called them nerds, they were very into video games and computers. They a lot of times played very violent video games and many people think that was a significant factor in this. Eric was just like them. He was into video games and computers as well. The 3 of them were made fun of consistently and even when they tried to tell administration about it, nothing stopped it.
This obviously affected Dylan and Eric a lot more than it did Brooks. Brooks never suspected them to do this. After the shooting occurred Brooks was questioned and thought to be part of the shooting because he was such good friends with them. They soon found out Brooks had nothing to do with it and no idea it was coming. Brooks said that there were some signs but he didn’t notice them till he thought about it after the shooting occurred.

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer- Mark Twain

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain, is a classic novel about a young boy and his adventures. Tom is a young boy who would rather be lazy and do nothing all day. An example is when Tom convinces his friends into painting his white picket fence, by telling them that it is fun and they should be jealous of him. He does this multiple times, to many kids in the neighborhood so he can sit back, relax and watch. This story is also about the adventures that Tom and his famous friends, Huckleberry Finn, Becky Thatcher, Joe Harper and Injun Joe, have. One of his adventures with Huckleberry and Joe Harper is when the three of them run away from home. They decide they have had enough of their parents, and guardians in Tom’s case, yelling at them and telling them what to do, so they decide to run away. They swim across a river where they stay for about one and a half days, until they decide that they are too homesick and want to be with their families. Becky Thatcher and Tom have and interesting relationship; originally Tom liked a girl named Amy until he saw Becky. He then told Becky that he loved her and was engaged to her; she loved him too, until she finds out about Amy. Then, she doesn’t like him anymore and they try and win each other back throughout the book. Eventually, it seems like Tom has won Becky back until they get lost in a cave while they are on their way to Becky’s “party”. They get stuck in the cave for a long time because no one has figured out that they are gone yet. They have already run out of food and candles by this point; and to make things worse, they come across Injun Joe.
Injun Joe is a criminal who Tom and Huckleberry first come across in the graveyard one night at around midnight. They see him with his friend Muff Potter, and a doctor. Injun Joe wants to get back at the doctor, and kills him. Tom and “Huck” witness the whole event and desperately want to tell the police, but they are afraid of what will happen to them. After this, Injun Joe does not want to get blamed for the crime, so he disguises himself as a Spaniard who is deaf and mute. The boys encounter him again when they are on an adventure looking for buried treasure while he is actually doing the same thing. He ends up finding the money before the boys and hides it. Huck begins to follow him just waiting to steal the treasure. While Tom is looking for a way out of the cave that he and Becky are trapped in, he finds that he is using the cave as a hideout. Eventually, Tom and Becky get out of the cave, Injun Joe is stopped, and the money ends up being Tom and Huck’s. This story relates to today because there are plenty of kids who feel like they want to run away from home, or who want to go on adventures, just like Tom did.
An example of a major symbol was tickets that the children of the town got from Sunday School. They would recite verses from the bible and earn tickets, until they have achieved their ultimate goal of getting a bible. Tom trades his friends for the tickets that he gets because Tom doesn’t know any verses, unlike other children. This symbolizes Tom’s ticket through life: he just gets people to do things for him while Tom gets all of the credit. Another example could be the white picket fence. Other literary elements used in this novel were imagery and foreshadowing. Twain does an excellent job of “painting the picture in the readers mind”. He describes the setting really well, but still does a good job of making the reader think about it from their point of view. He also uses foreshadowing, for example right at the beginning of the book. The reader finds out that Tom hates being at home and doing chores, and from reading that, the reader can tell that something dramatic will happen later in the book.

Benito Mussolini by Anthony L Cardoza, post by Sam Barkey

Benito Mussolini was one of the key leaders in the conflicts of WW2, and was the leader of the fascist movement. Born July 18, 1883 to Alessandro and Rosa Mussolini. Little did they know that Benito would soon become the Prime Minister of Italy. However, he did show violence early in is life by rebelling in school. His politics were mainly influenced by his fater, who named his son after socialist leaders.

In 1902, Mussolini moved to Switzerland. He later became interested in Italy's socialist party, and upon going back to Italy, he ended up in the Italian army. He supported the Italian intervention in WW1 and was subsequently kicked out of the socialist party.

Mussolini ended up creating the Fascist party, and gained inspiriation for this political movement from a newspaper called The Republic. In 1922, Mussolini started the march on Rome, and kicked out the prime minister, and claimed the position for himself. He became nicknamed Il Duce. Consequently, attepts at Mussolini's life were not uncommon.

Mussolini soon joined up with Hitler in WW2. Escaping Italy, Mussolini was picked up by members of the communist party, and tried to smuggle them out of the country. He and his mistress ended up being executed by those same communists.

Mussolini is to this day hated, in America and all over the world. Because of him, Italy went from being an Allied power to the dark side of WW2.

Thin Wood Walls by David Patneaude

Thin Wood Walls is the story of young Joseph Hanada as his four years in the Japanese Internment Camps over the course of World War II. In the beginning of the book, Joe is a perfectly normal eleven year old who knows nothing of what its like to be different; at least, not until the December 7th attack on Pearl Harbor. After that, life becomes very different for Joe. He begins receiving dirty looks from his classmates, his neighbors begin to avoid him and his family, he gets hateful notes and pictures, and he learns what it means to be hated, yet he doesn't really understand why. Then one day, for no apparent reason, Joe's father is taken during the middle of the night. Any letters they receive from him have been censored and the authorities who took him will not say where he is. A short while later, the remainder of the Hanada family, Joe, his brother Mike, their mother, and grandmother, are told to pack up a suitcase and leave their home. They are taken to Tule Lake Internment Camp and given a barrack to share with another family and it is poorly constructed out of thin wood walls. Throughout the remainder of the book, Joe lives at the camp and endures the hardships that come with living there. Closer to the end of the story, Mike enlists in the army and goes out to fight to prove that he is just as much of an American as everyone else and to get away from the camp.Unfortunately, after a few months, they receive word that Mike was killed. His things are sent back to their barrack and among his brother's possessions, Joe finds a battered copy of The Red Badge of Courage. This and the discovery of Mikes journal that he kept, give him strength to endure the remainder of their stay at Tule Lake. Shortly after Joe turns fourteen, he and his family are released from the camp and are reunited with their father.
I enjoyed this book very much because it was an interesting read and I could easily relate with Joe and some of the other characters. I would recommend this book to anyone who likes historical fiction or who enjoys a good book that makes you think.

Life in the Game and Beyond by: Tiki Barber

This book is about a man named Tiki Barber and his struggles and accomplishments through life to make it to the NFL and retire as one of the great running backs for the New York Giants. He ran in the NFL for over a decade and enjoyed what he did, but he knew that he wasn't going to be a running back for a really long time and there were other things he wanted to do. The story first begins with Tiki living with his mother and brother. Tiki had a twin brother named Ronde and they were identical twins. Their father left their mother when they were very small, so their mother was working up to 3 jobs at one time to supply her sons with a good education and a good living environment. His mother did just that, Tiki always tried hard in school and he usually acquired straight A's. His brother Ronde never got as good of grades as Tiki but he was a bit more athletic then Tiki. Tiki's mother grew up in the time of the Civil Rights movement and she endured many of the horrible things that most African Americans experienced during that time. She survived her time era and grew up to be an amazing mother for her two songs. Tiki made it through growing up in Virginia and attending a high school there with his brother where they both played football. It turns out both him and his brother were being scouted for their football talents. Eventually, they both decided they wanted to go to the University of Virginia and that is what they did. So Tiki and Ronde played college football for UV for four years before they heard that the NFL was interested in them. They both had achieved such a difficult goal by reaching the NFL. Ronde was drafted to the Buccaneers and Tiki was drafted to the Giants. Tiki was told he was too small to be an every-down running back. So at first Tiki did not play as much as he expected. He was extremely fast but he just was not big enough to take the beating of a great running back. Eventually he bulked up with the encouragement of friends and family members. After a few years of experience in the NFL, he became the running back he always wanted to and he was very good at it. Tiki never played for a different team, it was always the Giants for him. However, Tiki knew football would not last very long because he was losing interest and was plagued with injuries early in his career. Tiki's true dream was he wanted to be a news reporter. There are many different branches of that broad job but he basically just wanted anything that had to do with news. Today, Tiki has fought long and hard for what he did and there are many details that i have missed but that is a basic summary of his journey to the NFL and making i through that. He is now a reporter just like he always wanted to be and he is living a nice life because of all of his hard work. His brother Ronde is still playing for the Buccaneers and continuing his NFL career. Tiki is a very ispirational character because he is what everyone should be like. He is a very modest person and he always tries and works for whatever he wants. He was never very cocky or arrogant and i think that led to his great accomplishments. It was overall a great book and it was fun to read.

The American Civil Rights Movement By: Linda Jacobs Altman

This book was about the Civil Rights Movement in America. It talked about the different programs involved in the Civil Rights Movement that were trying to accomplish racial equality by non-violent tactics. For example, the NAACP and the SNCC were both organizations that fought for no segregation peacefully. I was amazed at how calm and collected the victims of cruel crimes were when they were brutally attacked by protesters. Freedom Riders, members of the Little Rock Nine, and just plain every day black people can testify that they experienced horrible crimes all the time, and were usually able to stay calm for the sake of Martin Luther King Jr. The book mostly revolved around Martin Luther King Jr., and talked about his belief that if a person believes strongly enough in something, realizes that something is terribly wrong with their government, or stands out in the crowd, that that person should stand up for who they are and what they believe in, as long as that person does is without violence. The book ranges from events occurring in the Civil Rights Movement in 1909 to 1968, the assassination of MLK. Most people thought that MLK's death would be the end of the Civil Rights Movement. However, just the opposite of what people thought, became the truth. More people fought even harder than before out of anger and grief of what happened to MLK. They were outraged that such a peaceful man who only wanted to help his people could be killed so violently. They honored him saying that he died in the line of duty, and he died doing what he believed was the right thing to do.

Because the book describes so many events in the Civil Rights Movement, it focused more on telling the story bluntly than expressing a number of literary elements. There was however one symbol in the book overall. It was the message that was sent when showing that the black people achieved their dreams of equality in America. It shows that no matter how hard that white people tried to take away their strength, they fought with more strength everyday. It symbolized that no matter how much white people wanted to feel superior,it was humanly impossible because of the strength that the black people had during the American Civil Rights Movement.

Heavier Than Heaven by Charles R Cross

Kurt cobain was born Febuary 20th 1967 in Abderine Washington. He had a sister that was born three years after he was. He always showed an intrest in art and music and was tallented in both areas. The divorce of his parrents when he was 8 messed him up. He was mad and felt that he wouldnt fit in. He watched his mother get beaten by her boyfriend as a kid as well. He hated god growing up as well but was intrested in budhism. He left home after droping out of highschool. He lived in friends houses and was occasionaly homeless. He and some friends later formed The band Nirvana. there first record called Bleach was a failure. Cobain had a stomach condition that contributed to hid drug use. Two years later they relised the album Nevermind which was a huge success. In 1992 he married Courtney Love and just months later they had a baby. He became addicted to heroin and frequently used weed. In 1993 he gave what he considered the best performance of his life on MTV Unpluged. He attempted suicide while in Europe by overdosing on pills in 1994. about a month later he was found dead in his seatle home from a self inflicted shotgun woond to the head. He had a deadly amount of heroin in his system as well. Heis body was later creamated.

Or Give Me Death by Ann Rinaldi

This story is a fictionalised account of Patrick Henry's personal life. Patrick Henry was an activist who spent his life advocating independence from the British. His wife, Sarah, suffered a disorder, causing people to think she was "crazy." To keep her under control, Patrick locked her in a room in the cellar of his home. The book follows the life of Henry and his family as they go through their ordeal. The story is told from the point of view of Henry's daughters, first Anne and then Patsy. After Sarah is locked in the cellar, she is convinced that Patrick is dead, so she wont talk to him at all. In fact, the only one she talks to is Anne. The book is very suspenseful, beginning when Anne asks her mother who will inherit her "bad blood". Sarah says that the brother, John, will, but Anne doesn't want Patsy (who has stepped into the mother role) to be mean to him, so she says that it was herself instead. One night, four years after Sarah is confined to the cellar, Anne hears her beg her husband to "give me my liberty or let me go to my death!" Her words haunt Anne when she hears them in her father's famous speech. She wonders if keeping the plagiarism a secret is the best thing to do. As Anne wrestles with her decision to tell the truth, her mothers madness starts to infect John, just as the country enters the Revolutionary war. All in all, the story is extremely interesting and suspenseful, and it really makes you wonder whether or not Patrick Henry's famous line was plagiarised from his dying wife.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

No Mountain High Enough by Linda Armstrong Kelly

No mountain high enough is autobiography written by Lance Armstrong’s mom, Linda Armstrong, which walks us through the struggles they had to overcome to make their dreams come true. The book starts out during the time when Linda was a teenager, and talks about her alcoholic father’s abusiveness and the financial struggles the family had. Linda got a boyfriend when she was 16, fell “in love”, and a year later ended up being kicked out of her house when she learned she was pregnant. She and her boyfriend moved into a cheap apartment and had their baby, Lance. They were very broke and the boyfriend started abusing Linda. With the help of her dad, Linda got up the strength to leave her husband for good. She was so young, so raising a baby on her own was an immense struggle. Linda bounced around from one minimum-wage job to another, and struggled to find the time and money to support her son. Linda Armstrong loved her son more than anything, and that love was the only thing that kept the two of the going through their hard struggles and the three divorces the little family went through during Lance’s childhood. Lance got into bike racing, competitive swimming, and triathlons at a young age, and excelled in practically everything he tried. By the time he was in high school Lance and his mom were traveling the country for bike races, and after he became state champion he realized he could maybe get a college scholarship. He focused all his energy on training, and he quickly became nationally ranked. Linda Armstrong eventually worked her way up to one of the top jobs at Ericson cell phones Their life seemed to be finally coming together when Lance unexpectedly won the world championships, however his world quickly came crashing down on him. Lance was diagnosed with grade 4 testicular cancer, which quickly spread to his lungs and his brain. He overcame the cancer, married, had 3 children, and went on to win the Tour de France six consecutive times, an achievement no man had ever done before. After three divorces, his mom finally married happily, and the Armstrong family continued to fulfill every dream they had ever imagined.

Linda Armstrong is a strong and courageous woman who showed huge character strengths throughout the story. She never gave up, even when times seemed unbearable, and she devoted every aspect of her life to give her son everything he deserved. She overcame humungous obstacles. She suffered through abusive relationships and financial struggles. She never could find a stable job or a supportive boyfriend. She gave up her entire life when her son was born and persisted to pour every drop of energy she had into protecting him. Devastation became an understatement for her when she learned of her son’s cancer. As always, she showed her true character by pushing through the problem until it was solved. The struggle to overcome all the obstacles in her life paid off for Linda when her son became an international icon and the most accomplished cyclist in the world.

Biography of Michael Jackson- Posted by Cody Larkin

The King of Pop, Michael Jackson, was born August 29, 1958, in Gary, Indiana, to an African-American working-class family. His father, Joe Jackson, had been a guitarist but put aside his musical aspirations to provide for his family. Believing his sons had talent; he molded them into a musical group in the early 1960s. Michael was the groups lead vocalist and showed remarkable range and depth for such a young performer, impressing audiences with his ability to convey emotions. This group of talented young performers was named The Jackson 5. The group created and performed chart-topping singles such as "ABC," "The Love You Save," and "I'll Be There." At the age of 13, Jackson launched a solo career in addition to his work with the Jackson 5.

Jackson began to branch out on his own more. He sang songs with rock legends such as Paul McCartney, honored Motown by singing “Billie Jean” and debuted his soon-to-be famous dance move, the moonwalk. His most popular video was “Thriller” which featured a horror story, spooky effects and complex dance sequences. Thriller won over 8 Grammy awards.

At the height of his career, Jackson signed an endorsement contract with Pepsi to star in a commercial. He was severely injured while filming the commercial and suffered burns to the scalp and face. Jackson had surgery to repair his face and is believed to have begun experimenting with plastic surgery around this time.

By the late 1980s, Jackson had created his own fantasy- a California ranch called Neverland. There he kept exotic animals and had his own amusement rides. Shortly after opening Neverland, allegations of child molestation against Jackson emerged. A 13-year-old boy claimed that the music star had ‘fondled’ him. The police searched the ranch, but they found no evidence to support the claim. The following year, Jackson settled the case out of court with the boy's family and he remained innocent.

After announcing his marriage and divorce to Lisa Marie Presley, he wed nurse Debbie Rowe. Through artificial insemination, the couple had son Prince Michael Jackson and daughter Paris Michael Jackson. The couple later divorced and Michael received full custody of the children.

Jackson’s reputation received several blows in the media due to tabloids, documentaries and controversial debates. Jackson was arrested on charges related with the incident with the 13 year-old boy but was acquitted of all charges. Jackson later sold the Neverland ranch and started to rehearse for his final tour. He planned to perform in 50 concerts around the world.

Michael Jackson, one of the most popular artists of all time, died suddenly of cardiac arrest on June 25, 2009 in Los Angeles just before the concert series. He was 50 years old and will always be remembered as the King of Pop.

Autobiography of Martin Luther King Jr. posted by Heather Tinus

Martin was born in Atlanta, Georgia on January 19, 1929 in his grandparents home, he is the second of three kids. Martins father, King Sr. didn’t have much but worked hard. He preached at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church. Martin wasn’t exposed to terrible discrimination as a child, he had white friends but he didn’t go to school with them. Once school began he wasn’t allowed to play with them anymore. Martin began his higher education at Morehouse College of Atlanta than moved on to Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania and Boston University where he than got his Ph.D in sociology. Crozer was the first integrated school that Martin had ever attended. At Boston he met his future wife, Coretta Scott. Soon Martin took work as the minister at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama, Coretta’s home town. King offered the basement of his church where the group of boycotters met, who began the bus boycott, because of this action, he was the one who mainly got blamed with phone calls and threats. His house was bombed and he was also arrested under false pretenses. Martin began head of SCLC a Christian organization, where he went around speaking and writing letters. Martin made a national appearance for more than forty thousand people at the Lincoln Memorial, an occasion celebrating the third anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education. He began more campaigning in Birmingham actively with volunteers, and nonviolently. Yet many were getting arrested and put into jail for peacefully protesting. King was able to talk business owners out of it because of the major business loss due to the arrests. Soon King was arrested and put into jail where he spent eight days. Another big event led by Martin was the March into Washington, where 250,000 blacks marched into Washington D.C. and Martin made his “I have a dream,” speech. This speech reached many Americans watching it on broadcasted to their home televisions. Than on April 4 Martin was shot on the balcony of his Motel while talking to a friend by an angered white. Martin Luther King Jr. was a huge influence on brining equal rights to blacks in his own peaceful ways. This is summary of just some of the many things he did for his fellow blacks.

Gone With The Wind posted by Allison Dew

Gone with the Wind is a civil war novel full of love stories, overcoming adversity, and testing old morals. It portrays numerous characters that face the new “southern character” during the war between the free north and the enslaved south, otherwise known as the Civil War. Margret Mitchell depicts the struggles that many Southerners had post-civil war. Through the persistent theme of overcoming adversities, Mitchell instills the fear that white-southerners had with the drastic changes that followed the end of the Civil War. The characters are symbols of old meets new values. They test each other’s morals and values through their relationships in the novel.


Through out the novel Gone with the Wind, Mitchell portrays the women as strong and independent for their time. During the Civil War era, women were not seen as equal in intelligence and vigor as men. However, many of the women, especially Scarlett, are depicted as cunning and witty. Scarlett takes over the mill, and shows that she can persevere and run the mill successfully.

With the underlying themes in Gone with the Wind, and the symbolism of characters, I think that this Civil War novel is definitely worth reading. Margret Mitchell’s depiction of life during and after the Civil War really lets the reader into the lives of these people who are battling their instilled morals and makes them question their beliefs. With the ideas of love and new changes, Gone with the Wind gets put on the top of my reading list.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl

The Diary of a Young Girl is the published version of three diaries written by Anne Frank in the midst of World War II and the Nazi rule in Europe. Each entry is written to an obscure recipient, called Kitty, that Anne has created, possibly paralleling a pre-war friend of her father's. The entries begin when the Frank family was still living normally in their home, until Nazi police send a notice for her father Otto Frank and her sister Margot Frank to be deported to a concentration camp, so they hide in a secret annex above her father's business. Another family, the van Daans, move into the annex as well. Some days they get along better than others, but Anne writes that she is still grateful that they have food, shelter and each other to keep hope alive. They have more hope when it is announced that Italy has surredered to the Allies. Anne writes in such a detailed manner that a reader feels as if they know the characters in the annex personally. However, after a long time being cramped in the small annex with so many people, things become tense. She wishes that the war would end, and loathes the darkness and cruelty of war. She longs to find safety and escape the confines of the annex for fresh air.
Anne's relationship with her mother is a major part of her diary, and had so much frustration with her. Revising her diary, she later ralixed that the differences between them were just misunderstandings, and begins to respect her mother more.

Because this is a real diary and nonfiction, it does not have the same type of thought and ideas behind it as fictional story might, when an author has time to plot and plan the character's actions. When a story is real, it makes a huge difference in the value and thought that a reader takes away from it. The story of Anne Frank and her family is an exemplary case of strength, determination, and the will to live. She did not let the scary news of the outside world crush her dreams and hope of being free one day.

Anne Frank's diary ends on August 1, 1944, her last entry before the secret Annex was raided and the dwellers were arrested and taken to concentration camps. She was first moved to Auschwitz, then relocated to Bergen-Belsen. Anne died in the German concentration camp of typhus approximately two weeks before the camp was liberated in April 1945.

Z for Zachariah by Robert C.O'Brien~Nick Burrows

This book ties into the us history aspect greatly. It is all about the atomic bomb and that fits right into the 1940's lesson we did. When America dropped the first and only nuclear bomb on Japan. This book takes place in a valley were this girl is leaving with her family. Her name is Ann Burden she is 16 years old. She and her family have just survived a neclear bomb. the valley in which they live in has not been touched. at this point thought her family and herself do not know that. Her brother Joseph, David, her cousin her father and mother both leave the valley to see whats going on. They never returned, what hapend is once they crossed over the ridge they were suseptable to radiation poisoning so they all died. Ann is know alone in the valley, but one day she sees a man in a what seems to be a nuclear radiation control suit. she is not alone anymore. at first she doesn't trust this man so she stays her distance. Then though she finally has to meet him. but she finds out that he's sick because he took a bath in the radiation filled river so she nurses him back to good health. once he is in good spirits he trys to take advantage of her treating her poorly, being over controling almost killing her. so she knows she's not safe so she abandons him. and takes the suit with her leaving him trapped in the valley. She leaves the valley in hope of a new safe haven. The time peroid of this book is during the late 1940's i know that because just the way everything is described i could pretty much pinpoint the general time. protagonist is Ann Burden she's the good guy, just trying to look out for herself and the man in the suit is the antagonist but even in the beginning he was very nice and seemed like a good person but towards the end it was evidant that he was not. The Conflict was deffinatly man vs. nature because they both are fighting to survive in the valley both trapped in the valley. Because all around the valley is radiation. But it also is man vs. man ann is struggling towards the end to stay alive and away from the man in the suit. and one of the main symbols is the nuclear control suit it symbolizes power and survival because the suit is the only way out alive and they both know that and they both need the suit but there only one. the suit is a very key aspect. and the theme would be to never let your guard down. because even when things seem to be doing fine they could turn for the worst. just like what happend to Ann, every time she thought she could trust him she thought wrong. Over all this book was great always kept me interested couldn't put it down, i recomend it to everyone.
Nick Burrows

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Far Bright Star

Far Bright Star takes place mostly in Southern Mexico during the Mexican Revolution, but the setting changes throughout the book. Napoleon is an old soldier who has been riding horseback and fighting wars almost his whole life, most of which has been spent searching for the bandit Pancho Villa in the desolate and never-ending heat of the Mexican waste land. On his latest search he is accompanied by five American soldiers which he refers to as "green" because of their lack of skill and experience. Their names are Bandy, Preston, Stableforth, Turner and Extra Billy. Much of the beginning of the story describes the life in the deserts of Mexico and all the hardships these men endured in the scorching heat. When Napoleon spots strangers out in the distance he gathers the men and they quickly head for a canyon. However, their pursuers were quicker and soon Napoleon and his troops are trapped in the canyon and he feels that death in inevitable for them all. But before Napoleon has a change to talk his was out of an attack, Preston naively shoots the groups leader, and they are forced into battle. Bandy escapes over the canyon and disappears forever while Stableforth, Turner and Extra Billy are all shot. Both Preston and Napoleon are knocked unconscious, and when they wake, they find themselves in a strange camp where they are gruesomely beaten and Preston is strongly maimed. These savage people eventually brutally kill Preston and leave Napoleon naked and beaten in the desolate heat of the desert with only his gun and his hat. Here he thinks he is going to die and slips in and out of consciousness and craziness until his brother, Xenophon, and Apache friend, Teddy, find him and rescue him. His brother cares for him and nurses him until Napoleon realizes all he wants after all these years is to go home. He takes the long journey form Mexico to Missouri and meets people on the way to help him. He dreams that one day he will realign with his brother and together they will live a better life.

The author, Robert Olmstead, does a fantastic job with imagery. Although very gruesome and gory, the entire book was filled with descriptions that you could picture completely and you could imagine just what these men were put through. The descriptions of the torture and the pain made you feel every sunburn and sliver that they felt. Also, the characters were described so in depth that you felt you personally knew every weather-beaten mad inside and out. Symbolism was shown very prominently through the horses. Both Napoleon and his brother Xenophon loved horses and respected them more than men. Napoleon's horse was called "the Rattler" and it symbolized his own wild and untamed spirit and personality. Both he and the horse did not like others, would only lead and would not follow, are were extremely determined and courageous. This was the case for Xenophon as well, whose horse was as gentle and kind as he was. Even for the others this was apparent, such as the leader of the savage group whose rode a prestigious horse to symbolize her power and unquestioned authority. It was like the horses were an alter-ego or representation of themselves.

Although the Mexican Revolution occurred many years ago, the hardship and violence that comes with war are still the same today. Many men are faced with situations like the ones of Napoleon and must learn who they really are in time of crisis, and decide what they really want in life. Not only soldiers, but anyone who faces hard times and needs to find a solution or make a decision on what they want most, has to deal with the same questions doubts that Napoleon felt throughout the book.

I believe the moral of the story is to always remember who you are and what is most important to you. Napoleon went through a lot of struggles and hardships and faced death on more that one occasion, but he knew what he wanted and what was important to him, and he kept hi head sturdy and made it through.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Al Capone Biography

If you read a biography, begin with a brief overview of the book, then describe the different stages of life. When possible, relate the person to historical events, describe the person's character strengths and any obstacles the person overcame

Al Capone A Biography by Luciano Iorizzo is a great biography. Iorizzo gives the reader a very in depth look on Capone's life. He tells us everything from his family life; to how he is known as the infamous criminal known to man. The biography tells us what is true and what is not.

Al Capone is a very interesting man. He came along as Alphonse Capone born in Brooklyn in 1899. His parents, Gabriele and Teresa Capone immigrated to the United states in 1894. Al Capone has 7 siblings. His two oldest siblings, Vincenzo and Raffaele James, immigrated with the parents. Salvatore was born in 1895, then came Al in 1899, the Erminio in 1901, then Umberto in 1906, then Amedio in 1908, then Mafalda in 19122. As soon as Capone turned 18, he got a job as a bouncer adn the Harvard Inn on Coney Island. This is where Capone aquires his three scares on his face. He had just became the MAIN bouncer, and he insulted a woman who then grabbed a bottle opener and left three, large gauges on his face. Capone soon became known as the famous name, "Scarface." In 1919, Al's son was born, Albert Francis (Sonny).

1921 is when Capone's life starts to get interesting. He moves to Chicago, Illinois to work for Johnny Torrio. A year later, Capone is arrested for DWI and carrying a concealed weapon and assault with a vehicle. All charges were dropped. Capone is probably known for his violence. In 1925 and 1927, two people attempted to kill Capone, but he lived and killed them. From 1927 to his death, Capone was know as one the most infamous criminal alive. As you can tell, Capone went through many stages of life. He was a kid like everyone else, but because of a horrible child life, Capone got caught up with the "wrong crew," as some would say, and turned into the man he was known as.

Capone is connected to many historical events. Al was a huge part of the roaring twenties. He was known as a "bootlegger," or a person who sold alcohol illegally. A lot of organized crime, and crime in general, occurred during the roaring twenties. Capone was a huge part. Not only selling alcohol, but also killing and robbing. He will never be forgotten even though he might have been one of the worst men alive. Capone has his name in history forever.

Even though Capone was a horrible person, he had many strengths. Capone was a very strong man. After a horrible child life, he had to go off on his own, and eventually his parents died. He found ways, not good ways, to make money. This shows how smart and strong he is. Capone also overcame many obstacles. He survived many times from people attempting to kill him. He also had to go through life alone because either he wasn't in touch with his family, or they died. Alphonse Capone is a very intriguing man for all that he has done. Events from killing, robing, pimping, and bootlegging. Also, his family life is just as interesting. The fact that both of his parents died early in his life, and that he had 7 siblings.