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Term Papers on Book Reports
Frankenstein: The Creator's Faults In The Creation
Number of words: 1292 - Number of pages: 5.... 'perfect' and when he believes he has succeeded, he praises himself as a god:
'I had selected his features as beautiful, beautiful! Great god!' (Pg47)
In reality, Frankenstein is so delusional that he fails to recognize that his creature's outward appearance is hideous. He knew of the creature's disfigured face and gigantic proportions, yet he is so blinded by his ego that he fails to take into account the results of his actions, i.e. how his creation would coexist with other beings. His thoughtless actions immediately doom his creature to be a social outcast. .....
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Hobbit Essay
Number of words: 808 - Number of pages: 3.... the group succeed in the book, allowed he who was wearing it to
become invisible to others. Also, there was a black stream in Mirkwood
that made he who drank out of it suddenly very drowsy and forgetful of
previous events. All of these examples of happenings and objects found in
Middle Earth are physically impossible in a world such as ours.
Several of the organisms in the book are not known to exist on Earth.
Hobbits, of course, are fictional characters, as are dwarves, elves,
goblins, and trolls. Many species of animals are able to vocally
communicate .....
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The Great Gatsby: Doubleness
Number of words: 7517 - Number of pages: 28.... other hand, were an old Maryland family. Scott himself--Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was his full name--was named for his great, great, great grandfather's brother, the man who wrote "The Star Spangled Banner." And Edward Fitzgerald, Scott's father, was a handsome, charming man, but one who seemed more interested in the family name than in hard work.
The McQuillan and the Fitzgerald in Scott vied for control throughout his childhood. He was a precocious child, full of energy and imagination, but he liked to take short cuts, substituting flights of fantasy for ha .....
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Faulkner's "The Unvanquished"
Number of words: 436 - Number of pages: 2.... that the meaning of conceptions is to be sought
in their practical bearings, that the function of thought is to guide action,
and that truth is preminently to be tested by the practical consequences of
belief. Bayard Sartoris was a pragmatist. He 'let his conscience be his guide'.
Telling his father about Drusilla's attempt to seduce him and refusing to avenge
his father's death are two good examples of this. In the beginning of the novel,
Bayard is shown to be simple minded, but as time passes on and Bayard grows into
a young man, his mind develops and he .....
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Tales Of The City
Number of words: 5060 - Number of pages: 19.... for the characters within. It is this
sense of development that is most important for the continuity of Tales of the
City. The development neatly meshes the character's lives with one another,
till ultimately the product is a mass evolution.
It is interesting to note that the writing style Mr. Maupin uses to guide
the story forward is consistent throughout the book. Chapters inevitably
commence with a character's response to the given situation. There are several
departures from this style, which are explained further on in this book report.
The .....
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Grapes Of Wrath Essay
Number of words: 1406 - Number of pages: 6.... farmers, were all having to move to California. People were being evicted from their farms and told to move some fifteen hundred miles away. The Joads’ lives had all of a sudden drastically changed, "The family met at the most important place, near the truck. The house was dead, and the fields were dead; but this truck was the active thing, the living principle."(128) Their change in values, was the first step in adapting. The change of environment came progressively: first at home, then their life on the road, and finally when they actually arrived in C .....
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The Dead: A Necessary Introduction
Number of words: 783 - Number of pages: 3.... is gained into the type of person that he is. He asks Lily if she’ll be married soon, to which she replies "The men that is now is only a palayer and what they can get out of you" (Joyce, 178). Gabriel blushes immediately. He feels bad for bringing it up, and tosses her a coin in thanks, and as an indirect apology. He then rushes away to avoid further discussion, and perhaps his guilt as well.
The reader also discovers very quickly that Gabriel is very well educated. He is to give a speech at the dinner table, and he struggles with whether or not he sh .....
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What Makes Up A Work Of Literature
Number of words: 765 - Number of pages: 3.... represent the
fiendish ways that have overcome him. The way he torment s Dimmesdale is
seen when he acts as his physician. Chillingworth knows that Dimmesdale
was the father of Pearl, Hester's daughter. But he wants to torment and
take revenge on the Reverend Dimmesdale, who suddenly became sick.
Chillingworth uses his knowledge of the human mind and of medicine to
deduce that Dimmesdale's sickness lay not in his body, but in his mind: He
was holding a secret, a deep, dark, secret, that was destroying him. By
asking Dimmesdale if he were hiding someth .....
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