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Term Papers on Book Reports
The Catcher In The Rye Summary And Analysis
Number of words: 1123 - Number of pages: 5.... with Mr. Spencer, Holden shows his first signs of his depression. After an unpleasant evening with his arrogant roommate Stradlater and their pimply faced next-door neighbor, Ackley, he decides to leave Pencey for good and spend a few days alone in New York City before returning to his parents' Manhattan apartment. In New York, he succumbs to increasing feelings of loneliness and depression brought on by the ugliness of the adult world; he feels increasingly tormented by the memory of his younger brother, Allie's death. Holden’s sexual confusion further c .....
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Buddhism
Number of words: 1343 - Number of pages: 5.... and that is when he eventually saw the four sights, which would, if experienced as it had been told to Gautama's father, lead the young prince to a religious leader. These sights or as how Buddhists refer to them "The Four Signs" were in turn, a sick man covered with terrible sores, an old man, a corpse, and a wandering monk. The sightings of these men made Gautama think of the suffering and inevitable death which comes to all people great and small. This brought further questioning such as the meaning of life and the ultimate fate of man. As time passed these th .....
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Hiroshima: Book Report
Number of words: 845 - Number of pages: 4.... SUMMARY Briefly summarize each of the chapters: main ideas, narrative
features.
The first chapter is called "A Noiseless Flash." The title kind of
speaks for it self. That was exactly how the bomb was. No one saw anything or
heard anything but a flash. The first chapter speaks about how people are
wondering why they are alive, but their next door neighbors aren't. It was
weird, there could be a house right in the middle of two houses; the one in the
middle survived the bomb but the other two did not. A whole neighborhood could
be wiped out except .....
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Animal Farm: Boxer Is A Leader's Ideal Disciple
Number of words: 582 - Number of pages: 3.... into thinking otherwise. While Squealer is
attempting to persuade Boxer, Boxer says, "I do not believe Snowball was a
traitor at all in the beginning." He sticks to this until he is told that
Napoleon said that the story about Snowball was true. He then resorted
back the motto that "Napoleon is always right." He may have been able to
stick to his belief about Snowball had it not been for his naive nature.
The pigs took a great advantage of this. Boxer was also faithful to his
work. He was always trying to do more. Boxer was a very faithful
character who is .....
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The Scarlet Letter: Hester And Her Daughter Are Isolated From Society
Number of words: 457 - Number of pages: 2.... it reminds her of her
sin and in that way punishes her(Hawthorne 78). This house was far enough
from civilization that Hester and Pearl did not have a friend in the world
besides each other.
Pearl, is a descendent both of sweet children who fashioned a play
maiden out of snow and of the friend's infants who stoned the gentle
boy(Van Doren 130). Pearl causes several disturbances to Hester throughout
the novel. Governor Belligham plans to take away the child, if it was not
for Dimmesdale Pearl may have left her mother's arms(Hawthorne 109). All
that Pear .....
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Huck Finn And Racism
Number of words: 884 - Number of pages: 4.... whites, and should not be treated as equals, so according to this belief he should have hated blacks, but he didn’t. Huck was too smart and open minded for the belief of white supremacy.
Huck has had positive interactions with blacks, and has taken a liking to the slave Jim, who he helped to free, to go with him on his wild adventure. Huck never had very much schooling. This is one of the reasons he is so smart. It may sound odd, but the school system in Huck’s time had an agenda to make little racists out of little kids’ fresh new minds. .....
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The Scarlet Letter: Hester Prynne And Adultery
Number of words: 1472 - Number of pages: 6.... ready to punish her. "Those who had before known her, and had expected to behold her dimmed and obscured by a disastrous cloud, were astonished, and even startled, to perceive how her beauty shone out, and made a halo of the misfortune and ignominy in which she was enveloped" (Hawthorne 1185). The environment surrounding Hester is instrumental in making her pay for her sin. Hester can actually feel the burning on her chest as the people stare at the letter A attached. "It had the effect of a spell, taking her out of the ordinary relations with humanity, and in .....
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Jane Austen: Background Of Her Novels
Number of words: 2491 - Number of pages: 10.... nonsense, about something unconnected with the story: an
essay on writing, a critique on Walter Scott, or the history of Buonapart‚,
or anything that would form a contrast and bring the reader with increased
delight to the playfulness and general epigrammatism of the general style".
In 1809 Jane Austen, her mother, sister Cassandra, and Martha Lloyd moved
to Chawton, near Alton and Winchester, where her brother Edward provided a
small house on one of his estates. This was in Hampshire, not far from her
childhood home of Steventon. Before leaving Southampton, sh .....
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