25.4.10

Walker, Tan, Mason and Kincaid

Alice Walker

As I was reading this story I could not help but think that it could be turned into a good Hallmark movie. There is a good lesson to be learned from the characters in this story and I believe that everyone should at least think about if not learn from. It seems that more educated and advanced people become the more they begin to forget their roots, where they come from. It was so ridiculous of Dee to want to try and save her heritage and denounce her family name at the same time. It sort of reminded me of Beneatha in “A Raisin in the Sun”, waltzing in with some crazy African name claiming she is too good for her family name. The mother did the right thing by Maggie by standing up to Dee; yes things like butter dishes and quilts passed down through the years deserve to be put up and preserved but they were created to be used and loved by the family members of those who created them with love. I have a quilt that my great grandmother hand stitched and I keep it on the guest bed to be used but I make sure that nothing happens to it; I hand wash it and line dry it to keep it in good condition. I can understand both sides of the argument but I do believe I side with Maggie and their mother because the things that Dee wanted to take belonged in a place where they would be loved and used like they were intended to be used. I really liked this story and I can relate to it in several ways. I do believe that when I have children and it is time to pass on my family things I will think back to this story and tell my children to love and cherish the things I pass on to them but never forget to use them every once and a while; and always love and cherish them.




Bobbie Ann Mason

This story was a little on the odd side, but I liked it. It just made me think about how common it is for relationships to go sour after so many years and especially after the death of a child. I only hope the same thing doesn’t happen to some old friends of mine; their baby girl died of SIDS two days ago. I really hope that they can make it through this alright. Another bad thing for couples to do is to not allow each other to have dreams and help each other achieve those dreams. If Norma Jean had listened to Leroy’s dream of building a log cabin instead of shooting it down immediately, maybe things would have turned out a little differently. Then again, I think she may have had her mind already made up about leaving him not too long after his accident. It is really sad that the more time Leroy spent at home with his wife, the more he fell in love with her but his wife was going in a completely different direction and he had no idea. It is sad that many people try to express their love for their spouse but only end up pushing them further away. As much as I liked this story, I did not like the way that it ended; I really think that Norma Jean should have noticed how hard Leroy was trying to fix things and give him another chance; try to make things work. I believe she wouldn’t have made such an irrational decision if her mother hadn’t been so nosy and pushed her buttons so many tines. The loss of their child, the fact that they were so young when they got married and that Leroy was always out on the road, made their marriage very hard to begin with but I think that if they truly loved each other they should have been able to work things out.



Jamaica Kincaid

I have read this poem quite a few times but it is much better to hear Jamaica
Kincaid read it herself. I have always liked it, no matter how I receive it. I think any girl can relate to this train of thought because all of us have been nagged by our mothers or grandmothers about how to live or clean or act. Ever since the first time I read this poem I have thought that if I ever have a little girl, I will read it to her or even have a copy hung in her room. It is a shame that as women our lives have changed so much that now we don’t have such wonderful things to share and pass on to our daughters. We wash clothes when we find the time and dress in what ever feels good or act the way we want around any and everyone; there are just not many lessons to be learned or passed on now.

20.4.10

O'Connor and Olson

Flannery O'Connor

As with many other works we were assigned this semester, “A Good Man is Hard to Find” is one of the works I have read a time or two before. I have never really liked the story very much and I still don’t care for the message conveyed within it. I do, however, agree completely with the grandmother and the title; a good man is really hard to find no matter what era of time you look at. Men have always been shallow, cold hearted, human beings but every once in a while there is a handful of them who are actually worth our time and are truly good men. I am so incredibly thankful that I have found one of those few good men and I hope that every woman on earth would stumble upon the same luck that sent me Chris.
I did not like, nor have I ever liked, the grandmother in this story; she is so self centered and stupid. I mean most grandmothers will annoy the crap out of you and talk as if they know everything but this woman takes the cake. First of all, she should have owned up to her mistake when she realized the house she was looking for was in fact in Tennessee not where they were. Secondly, she should never have let “the Misfit” know that she knew who he was; if she had she and her family might still be alive. The third thing that bothered me about her was the fact that she did not care to plead for the lives of her son and his family. She just talked and talked to save her own sorry hide but in the end it was her talking that got her killed; but that’s what she gets for being so self centered. i did, however, agree with one thing the grandmother wanted in the story, I would much rather go to Tennessee instead of Florida.




Tillie Olson

This was a very sobering story and as sad as it is, I really liked it. Much of this story reminds me of myself as a girl and some of it reminds me of my sister. My sister was a sickly child and my parents babied her for her whole life, even after I came along. Amber was five years old when I was born and the difference between us was soon obvious. She was small and thin and struggled with her health and her school life. I was strong and healthy and independent and I did well in school; these differences were the catalyst for the unhappiness in my childhood. Even though I was younger, I was left to fend for myself when they were coddling Amber and for the longest time I even took care of her; I cooked for us and protected us and stood up to the bullies at school for her. These events, coupled with the excessive moving due to military life, made my childhood difficult. As a preteen I was clinically depressed and often wondered if I would be missed if I just went away; this continued up through high school and I was very close to being institutionalized. The doctors I saw seemed to think that my mother was the key to figuring out what my problems were but my problems were so much deeper than just my mother and I still struggle with a few of them today. It is almost scary how much this story seemed to echo my life even if the main character was more like my sister than me. It is interesting to think about what the mother says at the end; “Emily will not fulfill all of her potential - perhaps no one does - but she is likely to fulfill some of it, and that will be enough.” The mother only asks one thing for her daughter; that she will know and find ways to help her understand that she is more than someone who must merely "fit in" or be helpless before the forces of life. I believe that everyone should want that in their life as well as their children’s lives.

13.4.10

Serena by Ron Rash

I thoroughly enjoyed this novel and I think I will let my grandmother borrow it soon because I think she would enjoy it as much as I did. I really liked how unique and complex that Rash actually made Serena; she was bold and sassy and just awesome all around. She didn't seem to let anything bother her and if anything did bother she just got rid of the problem whether that meant firing someone or killing them. With the whole murdering aspect of Serena aside, I think she is someone that I could aspire to be like, smart, independent, successful, beautiful and mysterious; those are all things that I believe many women wouldn’t mind being. I’m not entirely certain why I was attracted to her character so much but I think the thought of how much power she held over people was the most appealing to me, that and the eagle.
I really liked the way that Rash began and ended the novel, both were very unexpected and well thought out; they are perfect examples of poetic justice at its finest. Serena tells Rachel Harmon to sell the pearl handled knife because it is all they she and Jacob will get from the Prembertons and it is that very knife that is plunged into Serena’s belly in the end by none other than her husband’s son, Jacob; its almost like a soap opera. Serena may have been an awesome, complex character but she deserved what she got in the end. I didn’t see why she found it necessary to kill her husband because even though he saw how evil and manipulative she was, he loved her to the very end; it is so sad when he dies and his last thoughts are only of her. Another thing I really enjoyed about the novel was how Rash gave even the most minor characters so much detail and personality and used them to tell the story from another point of view. I have always thought that reading novels or stories set in places that you are familiar with makes the story come to life so much easier; I have read many Sharyn McCrumb novels which are set in North Carolina and Tennessee as well as Stephanie Meyer and Yasmine Galenorn which are set in Washington state where I lived before moving here.

29.3.10

Jarrell, Plath and Baldwin

Randall Jarrell

Randall Jarrell experienced many interesting things in his life that inspired many of his poems. Two of his poems, “Losses” and “The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner” are based on his experiences in the Second World War. I had read “The Death of a Ball Turret Gunner” in a previous class and I found it to be a little crude; I now see it as I believe it is meant to be interpreted. Jarrell successfully conveyed his message in this poem in such a short and concise way that it comes off as cold and crude but in reality it is not. The poem is the story of a young man barely old enough to fight, going off to war and dying in his plane. It is actually a sad poem but its terse nature mimics the attitude that the military takes on death of a soldier during a war, which makes it seem even more tragic to me. Jarrell’s poem “Losses” was written in the same somber tone and it too chronicles the life of the boys who were too young to die so far from home. The narrator of the poem speaks of things that only a child would have thought; bombing cities they learned of in school or comparing their death to that of a pet or an aunt because that is the only death they had previously known. He also speaks of how impersonal the military is during war; the boys feel that they are only a mistake if they die and they only make the death rate a little higher. Both of these poems seem so tragic to me because they are so true. War is a terrible thing as it is but to take young men from their home and force them to fight and die for their country is even worse if you ask me.




Sylvia Plath

Sylvia Plath’s poetry mirrors her dark life and her tragic end. Her poems are extremely deep and full of profound meaning but they are a little hard for me to understand. One thing that makes her work stand out as much as it does is that she uses so much imagery and description in her work; it fills her poems with emotion and feeling. It is for her use of imagery and wording that I enjoyed reading her work but even though I read the selected poems in the text book, not much of it made sense to me so I looked them up to see what I could find out. One poem that I found especially beautiful was her poem “Ariel”. This poem seems to make use of several different references; the original story of the Little Mermaid by Hans Christian Anderson, her beloved horse named Ariel which means “Lioness of God” in Hebrew and Sylvia herself. Ariel is also the carefree spirit who wanted for release in Shakespeare's “The Tempest”. Sylvia may or may not have used these things in her inspiration for the poem but many speculate that she did. In her poem “Fever 103” she writes about the overwhelming influence that society has on people who are already fighting with self-identity. The speaker doesn’t really have a fever, she is simply attempting to comprehend who she is; she is confused, lost, hopeless in her self-confidence and ego. I personally think this poem is about the tension between good and evil. In the poem, the speaker is torn between her desire for purity and her desire for sexual pleasure; this makes her feel like a feverish person experiencing hot and cold flashes. Sylvia Plath’s poems are great works of literature that have earned their place in the history of American Literature and will never falter.

*I used the Sylvia Plath Forum for most of my information.*

23.3.10

A Raisin in the Sun

I have seen this play a few times, both versions that are on film and in person. I have always thought it was a good story but I have never quite understood the title; I mean does a title have to make perfect sense with the story? I think that Walter and Beneatha were both being very selfish and spoiled throughout the whole story. For one thing, they should have more respect for the money because it came from their father’s life insurance; if it weren’t for him and Mama they wouldn’t even have the money. Mama had every right to go put a down payment on that house because the money was hers. If I had been in the same situation I would have put the down payment on the house and then given some to Beneatha for school and put the rest in a savings account. Mama should never have listened to Walter and never should have trusted him with the rest of the money. She was very foolish but I can understand why she did; he is her only son and she wanted to trust and believe in him. Then again Walter was being extremely unfair to Mama and the whole family, so she may have done it just to shut him up. I admire the whole family for standing up for themselves and not giving in to Mr. Linder’s proposals and just as a side note, I think its funny that the actor who plays Mr. Linder is the voice of Piglet from Winnie the Pooh. I really like the end of the play because everything seems to work out the way it should. I would love to find a small house with a fenced in yard where I could plant a little garden and have my own little world.

15.3.10

Steinbeck, Welty, and Wright.

John Steinbeck

This story is not too entertaining but it is a good story and it has a good lesson. I had never read this particular story before nor had I ever heard of it but I’m glad that I did have to read it because I kind of liked it. I don’t think the mother in the story treated her children fairly though; the two younger children had to do all the work when the oldest child got to laze about doing whatever he pleased. I think all children should be treated as equals when it comes to chores and housework; with the exception of smaller children. I know my sister and I always had pretty equal chore lists even though we are five years apart. Another thing that I didn’t agree with is the fate of the oldest boy. Could he not have just stayed and explained what happened so he didn’t absolutely have to die? I mean I’m sure he would have been hanged for murder anyways but at least his family would have known what happened to him. The mother should have known not to trust her oldest son to go to town all alone and not mess something up because he is a lazy, arrogant, young man. She should have sent her younger son with him; maybe if she had he would not have accidentally killed that man and would therefore not be in trouble and he would be alive at the end of the story. On top of that, the mother should have sent her son away with more than just beef jerky and a handful of bullets; a person on the run needs more food than that and definitely needs more than ten little bullets. The last thing that really irked me was the fact that they had to shoot the horse just to kill the boy; if you have a good enough aim to kill the horse then you can just kill the boy and let the horse live. I have always hated westerns and historic battle scenes in movies for that exact reason; they kill the poor horses when they don’t have too.



Eudora Welty

I did not care for this piece one bit; I found it offensive and I was unable to get past the first page. So I did not bother to read the rest. I am sorry.

Richard Wright

I really liked this story, though I feel like Mary and Jan were actually making fun of Bigger even though they were treating him as an equal. I think it is a shame that African Americans once had to feel as if we were out to get them if we were trying to be decent human beings. However, I do think that the biggest race issues that remain today are there because of the African American pop culture; they reinforce the stereotypes and racial profiles themselves. First of all, I wonder where the name Bigger came from; is he a large kid or even a small kid or something? It’s an odd name for a person even if it is a made up character. Secondly, Jan should never be a man’s name; it is definitely a female name only. I think I may have to read the rest of the novel to find out, but I wonder if Jan is blamed for Mary’s disappearance or if Bigger is ever discovered? I think Bigger should have left Mary’s body lying in bed and made it seem like she died of alcohol poisoning or something; unless they could forensically discover her cause of death, then burning it was the best idea. Though I don’t see how anyone could not have smelt the burning flesh. I also wonder if Mary’s parents were ever told what their daughter was up to at night; I mean they could be black listed for having association with their daughter and her communist friends. It is too bad that Mary had to die though; I think it would have been interesting if she had lived and ran off with Bigger instead of Jan, I wonder what her parents would have done or said. That could have been pretty interesting.

2.3.10

Hurston, Cather and Glaspell

Zora Neale Hurston

I have never read any of Zora Neale Hurston's works but I have heard of many of them, and if the others are as well written as "The Gilded Six-bits" then I do believe that I may take the time to read more of her work. I did not really enjoy the first piece we had to read; it was sort of bland and uninteresting to me, as most essays usually are. However, I did like the message that the author was trying to express in the essay; Zora spoke of her childhood and the times where she realized the difference between black and white but didn't understand why there was such importance put on the differences between people instead of what made them all human beings. I believe that society should begin to see everything in a shade of gray instead of just black and white, then maybe we could make some progress in the world. With that said, I did really like the second piece we read; it was a very good story and I think it teaches some very good lessons. For one I think it shows that a good relationship is built on trust and sometimes it takes a bit of a test to show just how strong that relationship really is. The husband caught his wife with another man and even though he was hurt and betrayed, he stayed with his wife and ultimately forgave her in the end. That is a very good relationship if you ask me; I think every woman would be lucky to have such a loyal and forgiving man in their life. I thought it was so great at the end when he came home to his wife and started to play that old game with her again, it was very touching. I can only hope my Chris could be as wonderful to me as he was to her.



Willa Cather

After reading the pieces written by Willa Cather, I wonder whether she was a lover of music and art because both of these pieces deal with a character who has an unusually strong relationship with music and art. Both pieces were very nice stories and I enjoyed both of them very much even though they both ended rather depressingly. I can completely relate to the main characters in both pieces because I too have a great love for art and music; I could not imagine my life without music, it would be so drab and colorless. I can be having a horrible day and then I can listen to a nice piece of music like Claude Debussy's “Claire De Lune” or Vivaldi's “Four Season's” and I'm much better. I found Paul's character to be a bit tragic in a way because he was a little misunderstood and he just wanted what made him happy. I think we can all say that about ourselves in one way or another you know? Everyone is a little misunderstood and are just trying to find a bit of happiness in their lives. Georgiana's character was very tragic as well, she gave up everything she loved to be with her husband and make him happy. That is something that too many women of that time fell into, they had to give up their happiness for the sake of men, but who said that women aren't allowed to be happy? I think that Georgiana should have taken her love of music to new heights,made a career out of it or something so she could have at least kept her love and happiness alive. I don't think I could have kept my sanity or even survived out in the middle of nowhere with no music of any sort, especially if it was such a big part of my life beforehand. Kudos to all those women who gave up a part of themselves for their men, it took some serious guts.


Susan Glaspell

Susan Glaspell's play, “Trifles” has always been interesting to me. She captured the reality of the differences in the way men and women thought and behaved in that time and even now in some instances. Men and women have always had a difference in opinion when it came to what was important but what is ironic is in the play it is these insignificant things that really solve the crime. The men were so wrapped up in trying to find anything they could to pin the murder on Mrs. Wright that they overlooked everything that pointed to the motive of the crime; everything that only the women would notice because they can understand the sorrowful life of a childless farmer's wife and ultimately women go about things and think much differently then men. I have always felt sorry for the main character, Mrs. Wright, because she had such a sad life. I don't blame her for killing her husband because he was a mean old thing and he didn't care at all about wife's happiness. Mrs. Wright had always wanted a family but she and her husband had no children so her pet bird was the closet thing to a child, friend and companion that the poor woman had. I feel the same way about my dog, Rusty, he is the closest thing to a child a may ever get due to my health and I don't know what I would do if I lost him. The remnants of her happiness was in the little yellow bird and when her husband killed it she couldn't take it anymore. I have always thought that it was very good of the women to not tell the authorities about everything they found and let the men go one wondering what really happened. I really love this story and I may choose it as the topic for my first paper.

23.2.10

Robert Frost

When I was in primary school I was required to memorize and recite one of Robert Frost's most famous poems, at the time I hated it but now that I am older I appreciate the experience. The poem that I am referring to is "The Road Not Taken" and it is now one of my absolute favorite poems. I now see that Frost was trying to tell the reader that just because a road well traveled may seem easier, it is not always the best choice and you should choose whichever path in your life that will lead you to success and happiness. "Fire and Ice" is another one of my favorite Frost poems, it is so beautiful in it's own short and concise way. It describes the two most powerful emotions in humanity and compares them to two of the most powerful forces in the universe; the burning fire of desire and the ice cold feeling of hatred. I am not entirely sure that I understand the message that Frost may have been attempting to convey in this poem but I do agree that if I could choose I would rather die by fire than ice. I believe that he may have been saying that he would rather die loved than hated but we can never be entirely certain because we are not the poet. “Acquainted With the Night” has always held a certain amount of curiosity for me as well. I too love to walk at night and be surrounded by the still of the night but I don't think that was the entire message in the poem. I have often gotten a feeling of old London streets when I read each line and thoughts of Jack the Ripper also come to mind. I have always wondered what Frost was trying to say in this poem, I mean was he an insomniac that took long walks at night or was he writing as a dark character who prowls the night? We can never be sure about the true meaning of this, or any, poem either but they will always hold separate meanings for every reader who like delve into the works of Robert Frost or any great author or poet.

16.2.10

Stephen Crane and Edith Warton

Stephen Crane's Poetry

I am uncertain of what to think or say about Stephen Crane's poetry other than I found it sort of dark and drab. He seems to question many things about life in general and writes about life as if humans have no real control over the things around us that make up our lives and the lives of others. He also speaks of God in many of his poems; working off of people's beliefs, his own beliefs and the existence of God in general. Poetry and other works dealing with God and religion are often hard to understand unless you agree with the point of view that the poet is attempting to convey. Crane was raised in a very religious household and lived in a time where religion was everywhere; so I often wonder what he really believed when it came to God. I think it would be fascinating to be able to sit down and talk with someone like crane and have a theological discussion, though it might be dangerous for me to express my beliefs to him; you know the whole burning at the stake thing wasn’t completely outlawed when he was alive. I did really like the poem called “In the Desert”, it was very dark and interesting to me. Though I’m not entirely sure that I comprehend what Crane was trying to say with this poem; was he seeing himself and calling himself bitter or was it meant to be men in general? I think it might be a reflection of battle torn men who become bitter after many years of battle and eventually lose their hearts in the carnage. I’m not sure if that makes one bit of sense to you but it sort of does to me so I guess that its ok then.


"The Open Boat" by Stephen Crane

This story is oddly interesting and cruelly ironic, why did the most likely man to survive actually die? I suppose Crane just wanted to show how cruel and ironic nature can really be, even if it doesn't always work out that way The coolest thing about this story is that it was based on the true events of the shipwreck that Stephen Crane experienced in 1898 on his way to Cuba and Crane is in fact the real correspondent in the story. It sort of makes me wonder who the other three men he was stranded with really were and where the cook and the captain ended up later on in life; though I did look it up and found out that the oilier was actually named Billie Higgins but no names were provided for the other two boatmen. I think having neat little facts like names makes the story come alive and makes you realize that this really happened and it isn’t just Crane’s slightly macabre imagination. I cannot see myself shipwrecked and stranded on a tiny lifeboat; for one thing, I cannot swim very well so I would have been the first person to die if we had to bailout of a swamped life boat. For another thing, I am pretty scared of water of significant depths so I wouldn't go out on the open sea without a life vest or water wings or something. Plus I cannot last too long without food or insulin because my sugar would go haywire and I could go into a coma or die; so it would be death by drowning or death by diabetic coma, I don't like either of those choices myself so I think I'll stick to dry land where I cannot be stranded in a never-ending expanse of undrinkable water.


"The Other Two" by Edith Wharton

Wow this story is so close to events in my own life that it's scary. I think Alice has the same problem as I often do, with her former relationships. I have kept in touch with several of my former lovers and that habit has caused a bit of trouble for me in the past and even now to tell you the truth. It is rather odd that her husband and her two former husbands run into each other so often; I mean does that happen a lot in real life? I know my current boyfriend and my former boyfriend run into each other every once and a while but they try to stay clear of each other. So why did Varick insist on going to Waythorn for his financial business; could he not find anyone else or did he just want to be close to Alice again? I think it has something to do with Alice because of how they seem to act around each other. I'm the same way with one of my exes, we want each other back but we can no longer have each other because we are involved with other people so we talk a lot in an attempt to stay faithful. I could not imagine what would happen if Chris, Josh and Brandon were to gather in a room with me for tea though; Chris would be civil but I'm not sure about the other two because they have a history as well. You know what? I think I need to write a book about my crazy love life, maybe it would turn out pretty good. I do think it is interesting that the three husbands seem to get along fairly well in the end, though it could be just because of Alice and possibly Lily. I really enjoyed this little story and I think I will have a few people I know read it and see what they think.

9.2.10

The Yellow Wallpaper

It seems like every time I take one of Nancy Risch's classes I always end up reading "The Yellow Wallpaper" but it is a great story so I don't really mind all the much. Last semester in American Women's Studies, we read a piece on the reasons behind the story and what the author hoped to get out of it. It mentioned that she wrote the story as a sort of warning to both doctors and their patients that isolation and rest is not a cure for depression or insanity, in fact it often makes the situation worse. I have personal experience that shows that doctors now understand that the rest and isolation treatment don't always help; they wanted to admit me to a mental ward for a while a few years back but they thought it might make my condition worse so they sent me to a psychiatrist instead. I'm very grateful for that decision too because who knows what isolation would have done to me or my family for that matter, I could be peeling off the wood paneling in my room by now or something. I've never understood on what grounds that doctors in the past based their treatments, most of the antiquated remedies made things worse or created another problem altogether. Take for instance bloodletting, physicians would cut open the veins and bleed out the parasite that was causing an illness but it only did one thing for certain and that was cause severe anemia or infection. I often wondered what exactly was wrong with the young woman in the story; was she just depressed or was she bi-polar or schizophrenic or did she have a severe case of postpartum depression? The author is never quite clear about what ails her or even what her name is. No matter what I think this story is really interesting and fun to analyze

2.2.10

Howells, Hart, Bierce, and Harris

"Editha" by William Dean Howells

As well written and beautifully worded as it is,I found this particular story to be very odd and I did not care for it much. To think that someone would welcome the thought of war and actually want their significant other to go off to fight, or possibly die, is absurd. As a girl who grew up around the military, I know what it feels like to have someone you love off to some foreign place serving their country to give you a better life. My loved one was my father but I could never imagine giving up my boyfriend, fiance, or husband to any cause that could get him killed. Now don't misunderstand what I am trying to say, I love the military and I am grateful for the freedoms they have given and continue to give me; I just do not like wars that have no solid foundation or outcome that take the lives of innocent men, women and children. I do,however, understand the viewpoint of Editha; she wants George to fight for her and give her something to be proud of her man for. But seriously, couldn't she choose something a little less dangerous or life changing? I mean knights used to joust in the honor of a lady they were courting so its not that uncommon of a practice but at least jousting was a bit less life threatening than actual war...its just play war. I mean chivalry might be pretty much dead but if my boyfriend offered to win a video game or basketball game or something in my honor it would make me happy, so I think Editha has a few issues she needs to work out with George if they are going to be a successful couple, no matter what era in history the are in.



"Tennessee's Partner" by Bret Hart

I will begin by saying that I did mot enjoy this short story at all, it just did not interest me nor did it make much sense to me. The plot is ok i suppose but it calls to mind a recent event in my own life, which made me dislike it even more. Tennessee's partner's wife meets Tennessee and runs off with him and then when that relationship falls through, Tennessee and his partner are back to being friends again? I'm sorry but things like that don't happen in the real world. In the real world Tennessee's partner would have been furious at both his wife and Tennessee for their disloyalty to him and would never have taken Tennessee back as a friend unless of course he felt sorry for Tennessee after his tramp of a wife did him the same way. It is almost scary how similar the situation is in my own life; my current boyfriend was the best friend of my former boyfriend but they did not make up when my current boyfriend and I ran off together, so you see I know for sure that these things don't happen for real no matter how much anyone wants them to. In addition to the story being lame, the names Harte used were really annoying; even now as I am typing them over and over again they are getting on my nerves. Why not use normal names like John or Bob or George? Its much more practical and a lot less confusing and annoying. I think this story left much to be desired and I definitely would never have read it on my own accord, but I guess that is why we have these assignments, so our instructors can force us to read things we wouldn't otherwise pay any mind to.



"An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" by Ambrose Bierce

I don't have very much to say about this story except that it was very fun to read, it keeps you guessing until the very end. I love to read stories that have a skip between time, whether it be a dream or a memory or a flashback, I think it adds a lot of flavor to the story and it keeps the reader on their toes. I really liked the way that he described the sound of the watch ticking away the man's last moments; if you have ever been in a room waiting for something to happen, the sound of the clock can be almost deafening. I am a bit confused as to why the main character decided to go to the bridge. Was he actually going to burn it down and got caught or was he just there being nosy and paid dearly for his curiosity? I do commend the main character for trying to be a good Confederate citizen and everything but he should have just left everything to the real soldiers and shouldn't have stuck his nose where it didn't belong. I did not, however, completely like the way it ended; I liked that he went home to his wife but I think that it was awful to make him blackout before he reached her. Death is a mystery yes but I think that for the most part everyone, no matter what religion, believes that you go to a heavenly place after you die and I think that if he had gone to heaven it would have been right there at home with his wife and family, not an eternity of black nothingness. So if the author had changed it to where he had a slightly happier fate, I think I would have enjoyed it a bit more but overall I found this to be the best of all the stories we have read this week.


"How Mr. Rabbit Was Too Sharp for Mr. Fox" and "Free Joe and the Rest of the World" by Joel Chandler Harris

First of all, I want to make it clear that I cannot read that crazy hick dialect that these stories are written in and the more I tried the bigger the headache I received. Such a dialect may have existed once upon a time but it no longer does so I think we should be allowed to read a translated version or something. I don't mean to sound unpleasant but when you have to read and write as much as we have to, you definitely want everything to be more simple and less like a Vulcan mind meld. With that said, I enjoyed both of the stories themselves and they sort of bring to mind a few of the Aesop's Fables I heard as a child, even though I have never heard a Braer Rabbit story before now. I think I liked the second story better than the first because I found it very sad but sweet. Every woman would want a man that would love her enough to wait for her forever and ever even if it meant death. However sweet the thought, I don't think I would want anyone I love dying for me even if it is because they love me; I couldn't bear the thought of my boyfriend dying in the forest waiting for my return to our favorite tree or something. As for the fox and the rabbit story, well I think it was very clever. The fox is a very smart and cunning animal and I cannot see how he fell for such a stupid trick; besides, isn't the fox or the coyote supposed to be like the master tricksters? Not rabbits. So props to the rabbit for being a smart little rodent and getting himself off the menu for now. I think I might read a few of the Braer rabbit stories to my niece one of these days, if I can find it in modern English or a children's version that is.

24.1.10

My thoughts on Dickinson, Freeman, and Jewett

Emily Dickinson.

Of all the female writers of our time, Emily Dickinson has proved to be one of the greatest, most influential and definitely the most interesting of them all. Dickinson danced to the beat of her own drum, did whatever she liked and wrote however she wanted. I believe it was her unique spirit and disregard of many basic rules of the English language that made her work so great. Her poems are very simple, straightforward and unique; characteristics that would never have survived had she followed the advice of Mr. Higginson and many others. I have found that many people view Dickinson as an writer whom you either love or hate and while enjoy her work , my boyfriend who is also in this class, does not like her at all. I cannot imagine why, except for the fact that he detests reading American literature but I have always enjoyed many of her poems; though I have found a few that I have come to like upon reading them for this particular assignment. One of the few that I read for this assignment that really appealed to me was poem number 520; its the one about her trip to the ocean with her dog. I found this poem to be very descriptive and it had a certain amount of childish imagination that intrigued me. She wrote it as if the sea were a house; the depths of the waters were the basement and the surface was the upper floors. In addition to equating the ocean to a house, she personified the ocean's water and made it as if it were following her up the great sandy beach. I think this poem was absolutely beautiful and it will remain one of my new favorites alongside the poems numbered 712, 976, 986,1078, 67, and 401 in the text.


Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

Until this assignment, I confess I have never heard of Mary E. Wilkins Freeman and my first thought was " wow what a name." Upon reading her short biography i realized that Wilkins was her maiden name, but i am still puzzled as to why she kept both her maiden name in addition to her husbands name. Freeman wrote many short stories but the one we were assigned to read was called "The New England Nun." I can definitely see the children's author that she once was in this particular short story. She is very descriptive about everything and effectively draws a picture of a quaint little woman with her quaint little existence. Despite the title, which had me a little turned off, I actually enjoyed this cute little story. It calls to mind the simple existence that I once wished for when I was a child and often still wish for. I can relate to Louisa in many ways; I understand her need to have everything done in a specific way and her need to be on her own because that is the same way I feel almost everyday. In a way I think this is the way most women feel sometimes; they work hard to clean and make things perfect but it is destroyed the moment that their other half walks in the door. Overall I think this is a great little story and I am very happy that it ened the way that it did. I would not have wanted the story to end any other way because everyone would have ended up unhappy. Louisa would hate having Joe around and Joe would still be in love with Lily and Lily would probably die of a broken heart or something; it is so much better that it ended the way Mrs. Freeman wrote it. If only life was that simple.


Sarah Orne Jewett

Once again I am going to confess to you that before this assignment I had never heard of Sarah Orne Jewett and I'm not entirely sure what to think or say about this story. First of all I would like to say that I think the name, Mistress Moolly is so awesomely cute for a cow and that if I ever own a cow of my own I will probably call her that. Secondly, I can say that I can definitely relate to how Sylvia feels about the country in contrast to the city; I love the forest and the only city I have ever liked is Seattle, WA so understand her sentiments. If I could spend the afternoon strolling through the woods I definitely would because it is so soothing and peaceful to be amongst trees. In fact, I cannot imagine living in a place where I could not see at least one tree; I feel smothered and alone in the world without trees. I thought that Sylvia's choice in the end was very noble and very smart because men come and go but there are only so many things in the world that touch your heart and soul like the white heron. Besides, Sylvia was nine years old, what does she need to be worrying about men and how they make her feel? She is too young to be thinking about those things. However, I do agree with her decision, men are just trouble and pretty birds are much better. Overall, I think that this story was sort of cute and sweet but I don't think it is one that I would have chosen to read on my own. Jewett's style of writing is very descriptive and colorful and I think I may read something else she has written just to experience her style again.

19.1.10

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Mark Twain is one of America's greatest writers and I do believe it is for that very reason that I have trouble deciding whether I like the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn more than I like the Adventures of Tom Sawyer. I do, however, like Huckleberry Finn as a character; he seems a bit more complex than Tom Sawyer or any other character created by Mark Twain. Huck is only thirteen years old and he has already had a rough life so far; he was pretty much abandoned by his drunken father and left to fend for himself on the fringes of society. He is a truly intelligent young man even though he was never formally educated and his true potential for learning is brought out by the schooling he receives from the Widow Douglas and her sister, Ms. Watson. Nevertheless, it is his various mishaps and adventures that truly makes Huckleberry Finn the fine, well rounded young man he becomes. He learns much from his misadventures with the slave boy Jim and the two con artists who refer to themselves as the King and the Duke; it is during this strange journey that Huck begins to realize that what he has been told about the world is not exactly true. He struggles with his feelings of what is right and wrong concerning his traveling companion, Jim; should he turn him in like any other white man would any other runaway slave or should he help him escape like he believes that Jim deserves. Many would perceive this thought as odd coming from a young man at this point in history but I think it would have been perfectly normal seeing as Huckleberry Finn was not brought up by "normal" people of a society, he raised himself and therefore he learned to follow his gut instinct and his heart to what he thought was right. I think we should all be a little more like Huckleberry Finn.

11.1.10

Hello everyone. My name is Adara and I am a student at Caldwell Community. I am working on my Associates of Arts so that I go on to get a Bachelor's Degree in Teaching. I love to read and recently I have gotten into the Mercy Thopmson series by Patricia Briggs; they are fantasy romance type books. I really enjoy books about vampires, werewolves, witches, magic, etc. so I'm not too sure if I will enjoy much of what we will be reading this semester. However the seperate novel seems to be interesting and I think I may enjoy it.