Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Response to question at: http://christina34.blogspot.com/

 Little League Haiku


7.) What literary device is used in the following quote, and how does it affect the story? "I was in love with the air, the smell of the grass, the warm light in the cottonwood trees at the edge of the field."


            In this quote, Scott Carrier uses the literary device imagery. Using imagery paints a picture in the reader's head and really draws the reader into what it is they are reading. This imagery had a great impact on the story in which he was telling because not only does it lay out the setting, but the words make the reader feel like they are in the story with the author. When using imagery in this quote, Carrier put more emphasis on the story and got the reader truly involved with the book. When an author puts imagery into his story, it changes the story to something interesting and it gives it a sense of importance.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Running After Antelope- The Test

1. What is the test and what does it symbolize?

2. What is the significance of the author telling about his different interviews?

3. Explain the simile, "A person's soul should be like an ocean, but a schizophrenic's soul is like a pool of rain in a parking lot." (41)

4. Why did the author get so emotional with the man he interviewed with the crystal? (41-42)

5. What is the significance of the slice of pizza lying upside down on the carpet? Why does the author refer to it a second time? (42-43)

6. Compare/ Contrast these two people interviewed: the man with the crystal and the woman with pizza on her carpet.

7. Why does the author start to doubt himself half way through his interviews? (41)

8. Analyze and explain why the author took the test himself.

9. Explain why he analyzed himself three different times with each time having a longer period of time since his wife left him.

10. What is the significance of the last line of the chapter? What does it tell you about the  authors' mental state at that time?

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Creative/Literary Nonfiction

I am going to add the Creative/Literary Nonfiction Hang 'Em High by Phillip Gerard to my Anthology.

          "It was back in the days when every little boy in America owned a toy six-gun and our national character was formed in half-hour TV episodes."

I find this example of creative/literary nonfiction meaningful because the children of today's society are polar opposite to the children of the baby boomer generation. The children of today's society are so dependent on technology and the children of the baby boomer generation had only television and not much to choose from. They had to use their imagination more often and played outside. This exemplifies the slow downfall of society. Children do not play the way they used to. They have become co-dependent of technology to entertain them and have slowly drifted away from their imagination and virtually their own independence.   

Friday, March 9, 2012

The Full Moon

When i look at this full moon, I loose myself. The bright aura surrounding the King of the night, draws my attention to the dark shadows of it's craters. The shadows jump of the moon forming the face of a man in pain. A man troubled with sorrow like a widower who never got to say goodbye. Destined to forever watch the lovers of the earth. As i gaze at the lonely soul of the night the realization of my biggest
fear sets in. I'm scared to die alone.