Thursday, February 23, 2012

The Great Gatsby ch 1-6

As the book goes on, I come to dislike Daisy more and more with each page. The part of the book where her and Gatsby finally meet again in Nick's home seems like Fitzgerald is trying to get the reader to like her. Gatsby thought she wouldn't want to see him and since she stayed and cried and got emotional we're supposed to feel sorry for her. She's 'stuck between the two'. But the thing is.. she didn't wait for Gatsby like she was supposed to. She married Tom, why? He was wealthy and seemed like a good husband. At the time. He's cheating on her, which I think serves her right to some extent. She's stuck-up and materialistic. She wants Gatsby now that he's rich and has this big house and throws all these wild parties. Why didn't she just wait for him when he went to war if she loved him so much? It's not like she was madly in love with Tom at the time anyways. Which is why I don't feel sorry for her and I don't trust her character at all. She's shallow and a complete tease to Gatsby. She's not going to choose him over Tom. I don't mean to make Gatsby seem like the victim either. I like him, but at the same time his expectations are way too high. He spent 5 years dreaming about Daisy. Now he's disappointed because she doesn't meet his expectations. Life isn't a dream and it was foolish of him to think they would have a perfect reunion. Daisy is stuck-up and set in her ways. She's not going to leave Tom. I know it. She's all about appearance and materialism. Even if she knows Tom's cheating on her, she won't leave him. Even if she loves Gatsby more, thats just the way she is.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

The Birthmark - Summary & Comparison to the Crucible

A scientist named Aylmer got married to an 'almost perfect' woman. He is obsessed with perfection, and cannot stand the hand-shaped birthmark on her cheek. She is so near perfect, he can't stand the way it ruins her face. Other men have liked it and found it special, which is why she never thought to remove it. Seeing his disgust of the birthmark makes her soon hate it too. She rather die than continue to live with the birthmark ("Either remove this dreadful hand, or take my wretched life!"). After her fainting episode, he is intent to get rid of the birthmark. She finds his book of experiment recordings and later finds out he had been doing experiments on her the whole time. When she goes into the laboratory and finds him and Aminadab working on something (probably for the next experiment), he tests a liquid planned to rid of the birthmark on a plant, it got rid of the spots on the plant. She drank the liquid and the mark started to disappear. He thought the experiment was successful, but she started dying as the hand faded.

The relation in theme between the Crucible and The Birthmark, is the obsession of perfection. Anything odd or different is looked down upon and cast out. Salem tries to rid of its impurities (the witches) as Aylmer tries to rid of his wife's impurity (the birthmark). Both attempts to "purify" resulted in tragedy. In the Crucible hundreds of innocent people are killed, in the Birthmark Aylmer loses his wife. Both thoughts of imperfection were relative. Others thought Georgiana's birthmark only added to her beauty, Aylmer thought the opposite. His obsession with perfection ruined his life, as the obsession with perfection ruined Salem village.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Stephen King - On Writing - Essay

Practice makes perfect, but in the eyes of Stephen King practice shouldn’t feel like practice. A writer should write often and enjoy doing it, “if there’s no joy in it, it’s just no good” (page 150). A writer has to take writing seriously but be passionate about what they’re writing at the same time. Throughout his life King has always written, even when situations were tough, and that’s why he’s such a successful writer.
At a young age King was writing his own short stories and submitting them to magazines. With as many rejection notices he King received, most other adolescents would give up. He took the rejections and used them to build his determination. He looked forward to little critiques on the slips; these pieces of advice formed him as a writer. Critique shouldn’t break you down, it should build you up, and Stephen King is a great example of this. No matter how many rejection slips he had to pin on that spike, he never stopped writing.
Writing doesn’t always come easy, as King learned while writing Carrie. He lost emotional connection with his story, which is never good (Page 76). He just about gave up on the story, threw it out even. All he needed was a little encouragement from his wife to get him back on track. Even though writing Carrie was difficult from the start, his determination to finish the story is what caused his prolonged breakthrough to success. Carrie was his first major publication. The advice he got as a child, and all the practice he got from non-stop writing contributed to Carrie’s success. Had he given up on this story for good, there’s the possibility he never would’ve gotten his taste of fame. It’s important to keep writing no matter what because you never know if your next story could be the one to “make it big”. King never would’ve thought Carrie would achieve as much as it has. He kept writing, just as every good writer should.
Even after Stephen King’s horrific accident he continued to write. He was an immense amount of pain, definitely not in a writing mood, but he got back to work anyway. With determination and passion anything is possible. Success come to those who persevere, King of all people should know this concept well. If you’re writing for the right reasons, with the right amount of drive, and as often as time allows success should be an evident outcome.