วันจันทร์ที่ 30 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Themes of a Small Good Thing



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AppId is over the quota

The story "A Small Good Thing" contained a good number of themes. I specifically wanted to emphasize on the idea of compassion, simply because it is an act that unites and defines human well-being. I believe that life can be very fickle, one moment you're having the time of your life and the next, you lose everything. This was presented early on in the story when the author described the life of the family as being happy, and fulfilled.

Their lives suddenly changed, when Scotty got into an accident. The story presented 3 situations that all had similar ordeals- Ann and Howard, the black man and Franklin and the baker. As the story moved on, it can be seen that the 3 groups all sympathized with one another because they were all undergoing difficult times. We turn to one another for comfort and it even strengthened out relationship as friends. I think it's beautiful when compassion brings out true human feelings and shields out any bad energy that inhibits our ability to reach out to other people.

This excerpt from the story, "Although they were tired and in anguish, they listened to what the baker had to say", would fit my situation well because it exemplifies how compassion brings people together. Sometimes in life, we have to go through trials. In essence, it is these trials that make us stronger and having the comfort of someone else makes bonds between people more fortified. With this statement, i guess it is safe to say that compassion played a big role.

Learn More about story guides and tips [http://www.internationaltravelluggage.com/]. Find all the information you need for your story analysis.



วันอาทิตย์ที่ 15 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2556

"The Fruit of My Pen" and "The Moonshiner", Two Wonderfully Entertaining Books by Michael L Schuh



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AppId is over the quota

What great joy there is to be found, in these two wonderful unique poetry books by Michael L Schuh.

A poet and very versatile writer, renown throughout the poet world simply as Mike44. Mike created his great loveable hilly-Billy character, in his first ever book Titled: 'The Fruit of My Pen,' where within the pages, you will find many more tales, showing life how it was once lived up in the hills. All great stories that are aimed to amuse and show the reader the way of life, that was lived by men,characters like this.

The stories about Bill the cowboy and his horse, are told very entertainingly by the horse himself, as he explains all his own likes, dislikes and hilarious points of view to Bill. But it is the Hilly-billy illicit moonshine making fellow, up in the hills, that is the true star. For this greatly amusing character, lives life by trading the moonshine he produces, for food and other provisions that he is always in need of.

After portraying him so well in the first book, Mike then solely wrote his second book about him. This book Titled: 'The Moonshiner' soon followed with true delight to all his fans. Especially as it is the character himself, that is doing all the talking, as he tells greatly in his southern drawl, all the amusing anecdotes about his life and day to day living. This includes all the trials and tribulations that he faces, whilst attending his stills to run his illicit business. All greatly entertaining very funny escapades, that he along with his other odd ball country pals get up to. Showing true hilly-billy sense of humour, he tells just how they deal with any problems they come up against, just by living the life they do, while totally smashed with drink, all the time of course.

His friends supposedly come up daily to help him, around the shack of a house that he lives in, to do (or rather to undo) all the necessary and most needed repairs. But, nothing ever does get done right, because all they do, is sample the very strong shine, that they swear to the Moonshine maker himself, is the best there is! With every new batch they compliment him more, swearing that it is the best yet! Thus getting more and more, till they are once again all completely blind drunk and legless. So that nothing ever does gets done, but what does get done, is the job of making you the reader laugh, and tremendously so! For if you can relate in any way, to the lives that they live then you will laugh with even more gusto, at seeing all the hits and misses that they have to face in life.

These highly amusing books will certainly make a great gift for all, especially boys of any age. Michael L Schuh has written other great story books too, once you have read one of his books then you definitely want to search him out, to read his other two story books. Titled: "Mike and Joe" and "The Cross." But as well as these great books Mike being a true believer in God, has also written, some truly wonderful poems of loving prayers, which he has now portrayed beautifully in his spiritual poetry book titled: "Spiritual Thoughts on Love and Life".

My name is PatriciaAnn Farnsworth - Simpson aka Pat Simpson

http://patthepoet.com/



วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 5 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2556

The Unpredictable Monarch - The Most Dominant Force Forever! Part 8



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AppId is over the quota

The 'Little India', Singapore was much crowded that evening. It was almost like an Indian metro flooded with people all over. Karthik and Humairah were walking very close to each other. The gap must be as little as an inch. The unmatchable artistic silver ware, brass ware, crafty ethnic jewellery, silk saris shop and other Indian works dominated the scene.

"If Vaishu accompanied us, you can shop a lot. I am not good when it comes to jewellery or saris."

"Vaish has to look after aunty, isn't it?" As Humairah was telling this to Karthik, her eyes and mind targeted jewellery. Karthik understood that and took her to the shop. Humairah enjoyed the artistic beauty of that 'gimmicky' (earring). Karthik settled the shop owner before Humairah could even think of buying it. Humairah pretended to be angry "How much is this, Karthik?" Karthik walked out of the shop silently and Humairah followed him with packed earring.

Karthik stopped near a flower shop and bought a jasmine garland. "Humairah, most of the traditional south Indian girls especially 'Tamil' girls wear this on their head" Karthik said and gave it to her.

Humairah smelled it "Fabulous. How to wear this?" she asked. She tried to fix it on her hair and it fell on Karthik's hand. He fixed it on her hair. Karthik later felt sentimental about that, since only a husband can do that to his wife. But that absolutely had no impact on Humairah. Then they moved on to the Henna Tattoo centre and Humairah's hand and palm were glorified there. Humairah was excited about her hand being decorated.

"It's more famous in Pakistan and India" said Karthik.

Humairah enjoyed every second in 'Little India'. They had a vegetarian dinner in a south Indian restaurant. Humairah, in a jewellery shop, took a piece of crafty ethnic jewellery.

"Karthik, this is fantastic." Karthik smiled "This is 'Thali' worn by Hindu women in the marriage knot on wedding and is never removed in life time. If you need it, shall I tie you the knot?" he joked.

To his shock, Humairah blushed "yes". What would a London girl know about Indian life style? They again stopped near a tea stall to have 'Teh Tarik', a hand pulled cup of tea.

April 14th evening passed very sooner than it actually was. Humairah is now seriously attracted to Karthik. She turned her diary in the night. April 14th was already filled with 'Little India'. On April 15th page, she wrote 'China Town', on April 16th page 'Geylang Serai' and on 17th page 'Kampong glam'. She assigned a 'question mark' on 18th and wrote "How will I manage to leave Singapore. I'll miss a lot", on 19th of April page. Now her diary has gone crazy.

How can one change in an evening? It is not this evening alone that changed Humairah's mind. It started long back in London on Shelvi's apartment. Even before that, fate has fixed its plot. Karthik and Humairah are born for each other. It is 'Nature', who is the superior ruler in this world.

Vaishnavi and Humairah had long chats during the night. The topic was 'Journalism Conference' at times, 'Countries and cultures' at other times and 'Karthik', most of the times. Humairah was eager to know more and more about Karthik. But she was intelligent in sourcing inputs from Vaishnavi without revealing her intentions. She understood Karthik and Vaishnavi had common interests. Both of them loved Illayaraja's * and yanni's music. Both of them loved South Indian Vegetarian food. Both of them had spiritual mind. Karthik loved cricket and Tennis, but Vaishnavi doesn't know much about sports. Humairah started analyzing what is common between Karthik

and herself. Humairah always fancied Winston Churchill's speeches, David Becham's Manchester United, Bernard Shah's critics, Maurice devareuh's Researches on evolution and earlier Pink Floyd's music and heavy metal crashes and the recent addition to this is 'Karthik'.



วันอังคารที่ 26 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2556

Rose for Emily William Faulkner



Sides of change

William Faulkner, a resident of Oxford, Mississippi, a veteran who didn't attend any literary school. His work, A Rose for Emily, explored the history and legends of the South while delving into sensitive human character insight. He discusses how Emily, the main character, refused to accept the change. It is the spirit of his capture, the shed in the past and the present as it refers to the rejection of the change and the rejection of progress.

Select a post civil war at the end of the 19th century, beginning of the 20th century, A Rose for Emily showing two sides opposite of townspeople who accepted it:, Emily who refused it. Her father influenced vatiihsota transformations; While their home; Apple, Colonel Sartoris; Darling, Homer, symbolized in the past. Emily was raised very traditionally; Her father was a very old-fashioned, not believe equality between women and men. Even in a world of equality, taught a woman's place is in the background, Emily. Her admiration for him was that his "pencil games save portrait" and its best games in his age of death, the death took games 3 days to identify him. On his death, Emily refused to accept something has changed the master is gone.

This refusal also seemed to accept the modification, you are forced to save her. Even after all transformations, was the first war fought primarily to end slavery is war, Emily refused to give you the freedom of it. She kept him until the day she died, "[s] he ...[T] he Negro went right through the House, behind, not seen anymore. "its ways and nothing was Emily, not even the ambivalence surrounding of the people towards the games. She pitied, continuous world, be a Falcon, and there were those who were happy when she fell, "she had become humanized," they said. Emily not to move: she was a mysterious, eccentric loner, who reject change.

It is a concept which did not take up the Emily. "Next generation" of city leaders tried to make her pay her taxes, she clung to the old agreement that Colonel Sartori's tax remitted. The death of Colonel Sartori, like other changes, neighborhood, and the firm was denied in reiterating that "[it] to [EC] no taxes Jefferson." she was released the same way she was closing their "thirty years before." Did not receive the same duties, remove. Fellowship, Emily denies the present past.

The old tradition and are not only things saved Emily. With the beginning of the relationship between games and Homer scandalous (Yankees) is eliminated the feeling of desertion, it felt after her father's death by killing Homer. There, in a room on the second floor, Homer's remains lay untouched since it has the same name. Put his name in the bedroom upstairs, "[t] he [had] probably lain pointer once her attitude, but now the long sleep, love conquers even outlasts the grimace of love, had cuckolded him." she had preserved his points, and memories shared with games room is happy this is upstairs in her house.

And the personification of Emily Grierson, decay was "[a] stubborn, fielding." Emily, just like her home, once the symbol of the southern aristocracy, he left her with only one neighborhood type. While "... Automotive cotton gins and destroying the neighborhood was seized, ... " She resisted and refused to change the time capsule and a life just like that never was buried. She was caught between the past and present is a stand still like her now, she stood there, affected by the changes around the games. Emily refused, resisted the change; In fact, she refused to progress.

The progress of our joy and satisfaction is required. It is important for us to learn from the past, and use it to improve things for the future. Emily vashaor after the war fled who really change, the Lotus is useless. She lives her life, which in the past two ???????? the changes around the games, was recluse. She was very isolated until the end of the games, which could avoid and she was a little open, change, change-Hamran is inevitable. As former United Kingdom Prime Minister, Harold Wilson at the end he said, "who change is the architect of decay. Only one institution, this progress is the cemetery. "



วันพุธที่ 13 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2556

Exaggerated Stereotypes of Mountain Folk



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AppId is over the quota

The short story "Sawdust," written by "Chris Offut," gives the reader an insider's view into the life of a backwoods Appalachian family. Written in the first person, the speaker, Junior, doles out bits and pieces of his early childhood growing up with his brother, Warren, and his mother and father. Authentic hill-speak gives the reader the sense of being there as the adult Junior takes up the quest for a GED.

According to Junior, no one on his hillside has ever finished high school. And in his own words, he, "don't hunt, fish, or work." But getting a GED becomes something that nags at him even though it causes strife within his family and generates a considerable amount of gossip among his neighbors. His mother accuses him of getting above his raising while his brother displays some temper at the idea and eventually stops speaking to him for a time. Even his neighbors get into the act and Junior finds himself forced to defend his now deceased father and his own reputation.

Despite his own doubts and the feelings of his family and neighbors, getting his GED becomes Juniors personal Holy Grail. In the end he works up his courage to take the GED test but this generates another problem, how to pay the fifteen dollar fee required by the state. Even that takes a backseat to the choice of returning for the test result versus never knowing. Junior shows the reader than even personal fears can be overcome if one is stubborn enough.

Receiving his GED certificate is Junior's final personal accomplishment in this story. When the reader leaves him he is searching a creek bank for pop bottles because he still owes the state fifteen dollars.

While I found this story to be quite amusing, it struck a not so pleasant cord within me. As someone born in the hills of Appalachia, I can honestly say that I have never encountered anyone quite like Junior or his kinfolk. Mr. Offut has taken certain characteristics and blown them way out of proportion and perhaps that was his intention, but then again, perhaps not. He commented in an interview with "Ace Weekly" that he wanted to write a book about "us" instead of "them."  I think he failed miserably.

Still, you may find "Kentucky Straight" amusing. I must confess I stopped reading after "Sawdust," because sometimes having your culture turned into a joke for the amusement of others simply isn't pleasant. Especially when done by one of your own.



วันอาทิตย์ที่ 3 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2556

"Everyday Use" by Alice Walker - A Review



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AppId is over the quota

This is a story, set in the rural American south, family house in a pasture, in which an African-American mother, "Mama Johnson," who grew up in the early part of the past century, struggles to absorb, understand, evaluate and appreciate the ramifications of her strongly bucolic and dirty background in comparison with a daughter (Dee) who had obtained an impressive advanced formal education in Augusta in Georgia and migrated to work in an urban environment. Mama, in several ways, views her other daughter, Maggie, who is in the comparison the less fortunate one. Her ungenerous appearance partly stems from a house fire that left her with severe burns from which conspicuous scars remain. In Mama's words: "Have you ever seen a lame animal, perhaps a dog run over by some careless person rich enough to own a car, sidle up to someone who is ignorant enough to be kind to him? That is the way my Maggie walks. She has been like this, chin on chest, eyes on ground, feet in shuffle, ever since the fire that burned the other house to the ground. Dee is lighter-skinned than Maggie, has nicer hair and a fuller figure."

The story begins with Mama and Maggie awaiting the visit of Dee. Despite Dee's being a direct blood relative, the two went to great lengths, the previous afternoon to make the yard, "so clean and wavy." This is a moving short story that illustrates the conflicts between formal education, rural tradition, urban modernism, culture, individualism, egocentrism, community, cooperation, family relationships, aesthetic appearances, capitalism, morality, abandonment, transformation, opportunism, intimidation, oppression, and emancipation. The story illustrates a common American scene, more so in the African-American context.

It was realized early in life that Dee was the significantly brilliant and ambitious one of the two daughters, she longed for the modern advanced setting; in Mama's words, "She use to read to us without pity; forcing words, lies, other folks' habits, whole lives upon us, sitting trapped and ignorant underneath her voice. She washed us in a river of make-believe, burned us with a lot of knowledge we didn't necessarily need to know." She was outspoken and unabashed, loved to dress well and display her beauty, "Dee wanted nice things." Mama, a woman whose formal school education was shut down in 1927 right after she had achieved a second grade education, apparently embraces her daughter's brilliance and ambitiousness by raising money, with the help of their church to send her to school in Augusta. Mama and Maggie, must have, on one hand, been eager to see Dee leave the home habitation, at least for sometime. The aura in the story, of her boldness, ambitiousness, and zeal for sophistication and achievement making people uneasy while struck with awe, is very powerful. Dee was a young lady of beauty and sophisticated language; Mama tells Maggie that she knows of some childhood friends that Dee had. To Mama, such friends were mostly mysterious, grim-faced, and they often seemed to be in a Dee-induced trance...astounded by her knowledge, bombastic articulation, and beauty. Mama says, "She [Dee] had a few [friends]....Furtive boys... Nervous girls who never laughed. Impressed with her they worshipped the well-turned phrase, the cute shape, the scalding humor that erupted like bubbles in lye." The author, Alice, Walker does not mention the father or fathers of Dee and Maggie, although she is strong on mentioning her, "rough man-working hands." It is hence safe to presume that Mama is a single mother. Walker would also lead us to wonder about the relationship between the two sisters. Mama, in the piece of writing, concentrates on these two so much that it is likely that these were her only children. Dee apparently has a certain level of fondness for her less fortunate sister, but that seems to be overshadowed by her superiority complex, by her looking down upon Maggie because Maggie does not measure up to her aesthetic and intellectual attributes as well as world view. Dee is quite outward looking and ambitious.

Maggie is quite the opposite...burned, bruised, poor sighted, ungainly in appearance, abashed to the extent of often hiding in corners and wanting to bury her head in the sand. At some point in the text, Mama says of Maggie, "...she stops and tries to dig a well in the sand with her toe," giving us the impression that she sometimes wished that the world would swallow her. The fire that burned and handicapped Maggie, undoubtedly contributed to her stultified development and reservedness. But it is not clear whether the bullying attitude of her older sister Dee also contributed to this. We must remember that Dee did read to her sister and mother, indicative of her desire for these blood relatives to become of higher social level and esteem. Mama talks of Maggie, "Sometimes Maggie reads to me. She stumbles along good-naturedly but can't see well. She knows she is not bright." The author also makes us curious about the house fire that scarred Maggie. Mama emphasizes that Dee hated the house and seemed to rejoice in it's burning down. This would raise suspicion that Dee had something to do with the fire. But hardly anything about how the fire was started is mentioned.

As Mama and Maggie await Dee's arrival, Mama imagines what it would be like for her to be introduced alongside an imagined celebrity Dee in a Johnny Carson-like high audience show, a situation in which she would get to travel in a luxurious limousine. She knows it is mostly a dream, and she knows that there is some pretentiousness and vanity in such shows, much of it scripted. Mama opines that in the TV spotlight, it is people of such attributes as slender build ("hundred pounds lighter" than she is) and fair-skin ("like an uncooked barley pancake") that are preferred. She displays unappreciation for staring straight into a ("white") stranger's eyes, and she was raised to be wary of whites. She marvels that Dee can look anyone in the eye, without hesitation. It is indeed a new generation of blacks, and more are coming. Mama knows that TV leaves out a lot of reality. She is a good example of reality, and she is proud of her bucolic strength: "In real life I am a large, big-boned woman with rough, man-working hands....I can kill and clean a hog as mercilessly as a man." Unlike this era, such comparisons between masculine and feminine strength seem to have been quite common.

The visit, by Dee, to such close blood relatives that she had not seen for years, is notably short. Mama and an intimidated Maggie are astounded by the glamorous, brilliant, luxurious attire and jewelry on Dee. They are also awe-struck by the appearance of her, "short, stocky," companion from the other side of the car. Dee starts by uttering, "Wa-su-zo.Tean-o." Although, nothing further is mentioned about those words, some, with some knowledge of African languages would know that it stands for, "Wasuze otya nno?," 'How was your night,' in the Luganda east African language. The man starts with the Arabic-Islam greeting, "Asalamalakim," which Mama, at first, thinks is his name. Dee says she is no longer Dee, but now goes by the African names, "Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo." No explanation of these African names is offered, aside from Dee's dubious mentioning that they attach her to her indigenous African heritage, and displace names given to her by "oppressors," this in reference to her legacy of slavery. Walker does not tell us that Leewanika is probably a misspelling of the name of southern African King Lewanika who collaborated with the British. Neither does Walker elaborate further on the other names. "Ngero," in Luganda, means "stories" or "tales," "Wangero" meaning, "the one associated with stories/ tales." Kemanjo is probably a misspelling of some African name, or it is not a common African name. Mama gets to learn that "Asalamalakim" is Hakim-a-barber, probably a mishearing of the Arabic Islam names, "Hakim Akbar." All this is quite representative of the movements toward Africanism and black power in the 1960's and 1970's. Many of the quite formally educated, started adopting African and Islamic names, many times they did not know the meaning or histories of these names, and many became misspelled. It was an attempt at Africanization of identity, and embracing of Islam as an alternative religion to Christianity which was often perceived as the religion of oppressors. Indeed, many slavers and their ancestors have been Churchgoers. The paradox here is that the Dees and Hakims of this world are disdainful of their black-African heritage that is closest to them. Compared to the African culture of the Deep South, adopting African names is only a token of African culture. This ambivalence is becomes even more profound as Dee attempts to plunder his family of valuable crafts, such as quilts (put together over ancestral generations) and a churn handed down from previous ancestors. Dee likely wants to keep these valuables, as tokens of her heritage, as souvenirs, displayed in her home. Dee even belittles Maggie who owns some of them, saying she was only capable of putting them to, "Everyday use," and laughingly saying that, "Maggie's brain is like an elephant's" (also meaning that she has a good memory). Both Mama's and Maggie get disturbed and angered by Dee's demeanor of disrespect, insulting, selfishness, and aggression. Maggie still wants to give in to Dee, over the quilts that she really wants. An animated Mama, strongly declines and throws the quilts into Maggie's lap. Dee and Akbar leave shortly, soon after Dee implying to Mama that she did not understand the value of heritage and that Maggie should elevate herself out of the southern black rural environment. It is in this last incident that Mama gets to appreciate the strength and value of her younger daughter as against the seemingly foreign brash mannerisms of her older sister.

This story is quite representative of African-American social dynamics and dilemma. Of those who look down upon their past, as well as their less fortunate peers, while looking for fame and fortune in the capitalist world that involves aggressiveness, opportunism, and acquisition of wealth. The rural South is slow, family is important, with traditionalists finding it hard to cope with the extremes of urbanism. Many who leave traditional black culture are ashamed of it, but they still try to hold on to it by keeping cultural artifacts, antiques and souvenirs. Dee delights in seeing their house burn down, yet she comes back to retrieve articles that well could have burned in the same place. She comes to visit with a weird looking man whom she little talks about. But Mama knows exactly the man that Dee will marry. Family, and culture is strong in the rural south; Individualism and ambiguity are strong amongst the black educated elite, who in this piece are shifting to the culture of "oppressors," though they quite deny that they are doing so. It is a story on black identity crisis, and the place of black culture and values.



วันจันทร์ที่ 21 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2556

A short story of guilty pleasure, Jeffery



Jeffery, understand the dynamics of the novel outside of marriage, and even before he asked the tall, long legs, Foto, beauty, her phone number. He knew he was wrong, he knew, would cost him. He knew he was going to the trouble.

Jeffery was the door before, but they have not been. After four years of marriage, almost lifeless, he was ready to go. True, there was no other month Act, his wife, on her back it up, some signs of life, then it was over. And her, and then sleep. No foreplay, no more-party cookie, straight, old Sam lovemaking position. Jeffery wanted more!

Maybe a little guilt, pleasure, you may be OK, Jeffrey thought to himself. It wasn't like he had planned it. He just let her. He did nothing to stop the actions that ultimately destroy the family.

After the first child was born, with his marriage, he decided to give his wife more time, come, she's way of thinking. He approached the establishment and then the second child, Jeffery still feels the need to touch them in ways that his wife, apparently forgot.

He feels cheated. He had expressed his concerns before they were married. He explained to her that the Act of love was an important part of the relationship. She promised him, he didn't have to worry about. Did she lie? Child or reduce the desire of his wife making love?

Jeffery was tired of thinking about it. His style was not begging, a baby or a baby. The novel is should be the answer.

Gin, blue eyed brunette was offset by the guilty pleasure. (This month's lovemaking advice) Act was incredibly hot, from toes to the top of the head. Gene was a breaking a man down, slowly, deliberately. She did love as it was cooking. Latvie?u Valodas, "when a man excite him passionately then, and then cool it down, only to move it again, in a different way."

By the time that Jeffery tried to cool the novel slow, it was too late. Jin was on his mind, his heart. It would be several years later that he will learn that his blue eyed, brunette, began the relationship with the intention of breaking up his marriage. She had, she was replaced by his wife, the first time they had sex.

Three years later, after the divorce, while his wife was pregnant with ugly second child, Jeffery realized at last. That relationship was that of the guilty, it was too hot. Now that relations were older, more forbidden, he too was having lack! -Where passion, he experiences when he met his long, mistress? Snake lure replaced the pleasure?

It took a while, but felt guilt about robbery Jeffery mother of his two games smack "not" to be a third person, bomhrmant of mind. And because of the charge, a new relationship too narrow.

Jeffery wasn't sure what to do. He did not know how to make it right, he did not return to his marriage. Its current relationship with the only people in the world who offered little is trusted he had two children.

Fortunately, his career because we stayed on while the roller coaster and life lesson. Maybe he was now his findings and his children. Just don't provide a solution where his is not comfortable. Perhaps with time, I love it.

Visit http://xicalovestories.com/and to get free instant access to hot, romantic, and mystery, love stories. Be sure to sign up for your free gift and join thousands of others, enjoy, new, online love stories and ask for a discount on a romantic trip.



วันเสาร์ที่ 5 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Controlled characters was Laughable loves, impulse-Milan Kundera



If only the Milan Kundera's short story collection was simply Laughable loves reading Professor ... Several other titles come to mind: arrest, strange, detached, sometimes disappointing. All these come to the core of the work, and that, to finish the book, you may be more elusive than at any time during the progress of the text.

In love we are Laughable with characters that often behave like being pushed along the training stage and one hundred is foreign, the cut is the same. They are often only partially involved in their lives, even their lost, no matter how familiar they claimed to be. They probably controlled the other, perhaps not only beyond their control, but also beyond their influence beyond their experience.

On the surface, however, this is not a book about totalitarianism or control condition. There is almost no political topics or references to Netanyahu's overtly extremist partners. As a background, as you can see, it looks like a photo. There are references to vatangshti here and there, but that's not all-embracing reality 19th-Kafka construction, limiting. On Laughable like Milan Kundera seems to prohibit people mainly the requirements our humanity. They seem to be their own, Obscura, enslaved, controlled but uncontrolled urges. This is the basic behavior that they think they can control, but the fact that they did not endorse that it controls.

And, of course, the urge of sex, the reality of sex, sex of maabna, the promise of sex, sex of the deferment, sex, all these bad to their common consciousness, apparently the motive and end of intention. We can play with the gods, career, or impact, but the ultimate driving force, our interest is his Holy of emotion.

In the film, he may have been a mechanical toy erectile fibers Congress, pre-ordained, the virtue of Obscura, a mechanism to perform every time the wound. In this book, Kundera gift people imitate such automata, except this time, spring grants, or, and the Cog tags. "Ah, ladies and gentlemen," he writes, "the man lives and sad when he can't take anyone or anything seriously." but almost none of these stories ultimately serious about anything, except that controls the sex drive that realisation was more often results of feelings. Immediately the next time he is Miss. They are sets, sets a fairly absurd, like the invisible hand that cut-out their play at the aliens makes them go and perform. Also cut is the person who is Sadder even believe might exist for controlling hand.

Philip spires

Author of fool 's, mission, African novels set in Kenya

Http://www.philipspires.co.uk/

Migwani is a small town in the Eastern Kitui District, Kenya. We examine the effect of changing the way books social and economic lives of ordinary people. Vdhikt characters whose identity they bound their home region, but whose future is determined by the global world in which they live.



วันพุธที่ 25 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2556

Stories and Short Poems for Kids: A Family Reading Night



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AppId is over the quota

Reading stories and short poems for kids aloud to your children is a critical step in teaching your child to read, but it has a wonderful hidden benefit as well. When you take the time to read to your children you are taking time with them, with no distractions, no cell phone, no computer, no TV. You are showing them that they are an important priority for you. They will love that special time with you, no matter their age.

Many of our read aloud story times have led to some great heart to heart discussions. Reading stories together gives us time to slow down and a reason to talk about things that maybe we wouldn't on a day to day basis. Stories are a wonderful way to teach life lessons, reinforce good choices, model positive morals and open the door to talk about life's difficulties such as sickness or death, dating or peer pressure.

As your children get older and you move into more challenging reading material they will benefit greatly from the discussions that will arise during your story time. Keep communication lines open with your children by simply reading to them. The relationship and communication that your family read aloud times will establish can carry you through what could be some very tough teenage years.

There is simply something magical about stories. We are all drawn into them, no matter our age. Sometimes my older child doesn't feel like joining in our reading times because he's too busy listening to music or on his iPod, but inevitably, as we get into the story he is drawn into the room from wherever he was. He can't help but listen - and usually sits down with us to hear the rest of the story.

Institute a story night in your home this week, and if your older children roll their eyes at you just smile, they will learn to love that special time with you.

Kristina Harding has more tips on establishing a family reading night using stories and short poems for kids and more short story fun at Short-Story-Time.com.



วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 12 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2556

The Destiny of Natalie X by William Boyd



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An aspect of William Boyd's writing that always seems close to the surface of his work is an examination of selfishness. At the very least, his characters fulfil their self-interest. One recalls how the events of The New Confessions or Any Human Heart unfold, how in both cases the central character's aspirations are forever paramount, often to the detriment of those he proclaims to love. But it is probably in his short stories that this theme is best illustrated and his collection, The Tragedy Of Natalie X, does precisely that.

Two of the stories, The Dream Lover and Alpes Maritimes, in just twenty pages each, pursue there ideas in depth. In the first, a student in a south of France university is envious of the obvious wealth and easy-going lifestyle of an American fellow student. This well-heeled American splashes money around, advertises his talents and gets the girls - at least in theory. He even has a desirable Afghan coat. By the end of the story, the narrator has utterly reversed the roles. Not only does he come out on top financially, he goes off with the girl, and even gets the coat. In addition, he has benefited from the other's profligacy along the way.

Another side of selfishness is expressed via responses to temptation, specifically to the proximity of opportunity. Even a man in a stable, happy relationship cannot avoid speculating what a taste of something different might bring. The possibility that it might sour everything else is, of course, never contemplated. In Alpes Maritimes a lusty young man just cannot resist the idea that grass is greener on the other side of the twins. His partner is one twin, his desire might be the other. He years to sample what he seems to see as the merchandise.

So while it is in progress, William Boyd suggests that life may be a neurotic search for ever greater fulfilment, even if that is only imagined. Future promise, it seems, always surpasses experience. When it is ended, however, life seems inconsequential. We live, we love, we dream, we die. And we are soon forgotten, even the turbulence of the journey is soon smoothed. Those with whom we have shared our lives may remember us for a while, but even memory, it seems, is founded in self-interest. Perhaps memory of a deceased is the livings' mechanism of coping with their own future.

The Destiny Of Natalie X, the title story, deals with the making of a film. It addresses pretence and the inflation of egos. But it also makes us think of the mundane and how, for every individual, it remains special, the only possible existence.

As ever, William Boyd uses many different forms to express his ideas. For some readers this variability may get in the way of appreciation of the material. But rest assured, the material is worth the challenge and, if it forms a barrier, then the stories are worth several readings until their challenges are overcome.

Philip Spires
Author of Mission and A Fool's Knot, African novels set in Kenya
http://www.philipspires.co.uk/
Migwani is a small town in Kitui District, eastern Kenya. My books examine how social and economic change impact on the lives of ordinary people. They portray characters whose identity is bound up with their home area, but whose futures are determined by the globalized world in which they live.



วันจันทร์ที่ 2 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2556

In Pineapples



Emotional roller coaster ride to take you, this is a story full of sweet ironies. He related failures and triumphs; Joy white; And loss. It is a hell of a story they were humble beginnings due to troubles, Asian to try another country together with his family. Transmitting sound is written with a passion play gentle words going beyond the intro narration. It marks the character speak for itself-complete with some hints of humor, anti-character flaws. And Yes, the story is simply fascinating as its title.

Narrator takes a seat to tell his story. Narrator starts an hour past his family to Hawaii from the Philippines in 1946. He was introduced in the context of the war in the Philippines suffers from hunger and unemployment in most of the families. For these same reasons, the family was forced to leave the Asian migrant and start a new life in Hawaii. But everything is not as easy as it looks. How many brothers are perceived by the circumstances of misery, you must stay behind. A reunion with his brother at the last, however, hell they are still more story of longing that is ultimately, happiness and love.

Life in Hawaii was not easy. Successes came through hard work and perseverance. Sometimes, it is very difficult to learn, too. The story also reveals high school life spent in primary school and high school. There he learned his paper route business, which led him to be the acquisition of second-hand and as trustee for casual cycling. The story will fall into his life after his shared with friends and adventures elementary Wilson Mando, Randy.

The story is moss12 from the minds of a person responsible for the creation of a place as. If you have already read the last adventures of it, you know that he is Asian-American, now live in Hawaii. This chronicle the experiences challenged to avoid from being hanged from his memory. He came with a collection of stories and to clues about his life. Tagged as "talk story" on the island of Hawaii, this narrative is teeming with enthusiasm and on the life of fulfillment. In addition, he also gives away that references this papaya, mango trees, Kauai Surf and Hawaii that may have you enjoyed from stories. With so much originality, voice, each chapter is an irresistibly less boredom of nationalist-autobiographical account.

She take the reality and fictional – something surely enjoy between cold weather, a hot cup of tea. But like what the author said in the introduction, if you don't know how to listen, then this book is not for you.

Pineapple Sam originated as a fictional character from the mind of Ismael Tabalno Hawaii. Is a person of Asian decided to "write the story ago as when he retired.
I loved her "to talk to Sam pineapple story" when they say in many of his friends and family, now you still hear or read about his adventures.
Http://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/stabalno



วันเสาร์ที่ 17 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2556

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes



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Book Review: The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

The literary world is incomplete without mention of Arthur Conan Doyle's legendary fictional character Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock Holmes ruled the minds of audiences in a manner no other literary character has been able to do and his adventures continues to awe, frighten and excite us till this very day.

The author wrote several novels featuring Holmes but it was his short stories that turned into a raving success among the readers. Of the five collections that was published, "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" published in 1892 was the first and the most popular. It contains all except one of the five all-time most popular short stories in the Sherlock Holmes catalogue (A Scandal in Bohemia, The Red-headed League, The Blue Carbuncle, and The Speckled Band), as well as some other gems like The Five Orange Pips.

These stories are considered to be among the finest ever written in the genre of mystery and detective literature and for those who wish to taste the work of Arthur Conan Doyle for the first time, it would be a great idea to start with these stories first.

Highlights

A Scandal in Bohemia

This is the very first story featured in the collection and one of the best. The story involves Holmes rare failure at finding the culprit. He is hired by the kingdom of Bohemia to regain a scandalous photograph of the future king of the kingdom from the beautiful Irene Adler. After going through a plethora of disguises and detective work, Holmes is outwitted by the lady in an intriguing fashion.

The Red-headed League

Generally regarded as all-time second best Sherlock Holmes story, this bizarre tale features a pawnbroker who is paid money to join the mysterious red-headed league, as part of an ingenious scheme to rob a bank.

Full list of the short stories in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

A Scandal in BohemiaThe Red-Headed LeagueA Case of IdentityThe Boscombe Valley MysteryThe Five Orange PipsThe Man with the Twisted LipThe Adventure of the Blue CarbuncleThe Adventure of the Speckled BandThe Adventure of the Engineer's ThumbThe Adventure of the Noble BachelorThe Adventure of the Beryl CoronetThe Adventure of the Copper Beeches

Why do i like The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes so much? Well the exquisite detail of the characters make them real rather than made up, the sometimes unbelievable (in a good way) stories and predicaments within the plots are utterly amazing.

To get a copy of this book for free, visit here

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วันเสาร์ที่ 3 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Christmas Short Stories: Reading Holiday Favorites Together



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Ready to start a fun new tradition using great Christmas short stories?

Most families have a Christmas tradition or two that they look forward to sharing together year after year. Traditions draw us closer together and allow us to slow down and enjoy the Christmas season; they're also something special to share with future generations. If you don't have a Christmas tradition, try reading Christmas short stories together this year! It's free, meaningful and gives a slight pause to each day of the hustle and bustle that comes with the holiday season.

Begin on December 1st and read a story each night until Christmas. You may want to plan ahead by having each family member pick out several of their favorite holiday stories to have on hand. You can borrow some from your local library, download them to your iPod (many can be downloaded free), or listen to audio stories. If you are stuck and don't have enough favorites for each day, explore some new stories. We've created a list below to help get you started.

Make story time special by turning off the TV, computers, and iPods after dinner each night (unless of course, you've downloaded your Christmas short stories to your iPod). Light some candles, or gather the family around the lit Christmas tree. Make some apple cider or hot chocolate and have a small treat like a Christmas sugar cookie or shortbread to go with your hot drink. Then settle in to read, or listen to, your Christmas short stories.

You'll be surprised at how much your family will look forward to this quiet time with each other and you may even have some wonderful conversations during or after reading these timeless Christmas short stories together. Story time is also a great way to wind everyone down before bed, both young and old.

Make this Christmas special and begin a tradition that your family will look forward to each year. Your kids will remember this tradition and may even pass it on to their kids someday!

Here are some stories to get you started. You can find many of these free online.
The Gift, by R. Louis CarrollThe Story of BabouskaT'was the Night Before Christmas, by Clement C. MooreThe Christmas Story, the Bible - Matthew Chapters 1&2The Gift of the Magi, by O. HenryThe Little Match Seller, by Hans Christian AndersonThe Selfish Giant, by Oscar WildeThe Life and Adventures of Santa Claus, by L. Frank BaumA Kidnapped Santa Claus, by L. Frank BaumThe Cobbler and His Guest, by Anne McCollum BoylesThe Story of the Candy Cane

We hope that you enjoy reading them and continue the tradition for years to come.

Kristina Harding shares more Christmas short stories and more short story fun on her site at Short-Story-Time.com.



วันอังคารที่ 23 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2556

"Mute," by Stephen King (A Review)



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I finally found a well written, short story with a good ending by Stephen King, a little too many cuss words for my liking, but not bad; "Mute," from the book "Just after Sunset." In the process I found out he was seventeen-days older than I. Somehow I'm not surprised.

Anyhow let me just make a few comments, and be done with it, it was a challenge to find one with a skilful narration - no, let me, correct that, with a tri-focal, form of narration, seldom seen. His terminology in dealing with a deaf-mute is wise, not belittling. His vocabulary is a little higher in this story than in the several previous short stories I've read out of "Just after Sunset," and "Night Shift." From a forth grade level to a fifth grade level, an improvement, although he shows his limitation with his simple unneeded cussing. I was brought up in rough neighborhood in Minnesota, and he does more cussing per short story, than I heard in a week long drunk. Do people really enjoy reading cuss words, evidently there is a group out there that must love them, I wonder if they use them themselves around the household, if so, no wonder America is going to hell in a paper bag.

The other thing I wonder about reading his stories lately, and I'm really not that much a fan of his-and have only read a few books of his, and threw them away some fifteen-years ago, finding only one well written, out of three or four, then I gave up, anyhow, I prefer H.P., and Stoker, and Clark A. Smith, and Howard, but what I notice with King, and even in "Mute," he uses the priesthood, Jesus, the words sin, the church and its language, and all that kind of sacred talk quite a lot, as if he is himself trying to make a connection with the incarnate God-man, as if he's trying to tempt him with his blasphemous stories. There is no doubt in my mind, he is very well aware of what he is doing, and perhaps has some childhood needles still in him because of Jesus being thrown at him, or shoved down his throat. Whatever the case, he's surely not writing for posterity, or to get into the gates of heaven, but I suppose at an income of $173-million, that would even tempt the best of men.



วันจันทร์ที่ 8 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland



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Book Review: Alice's Adventures In Wonderland by Lewis Caroll

Lewis Carrol phenomenally successful work "Alice In Wonderland", is all about Alice falling down a rabbit hole and then coming back to the surface. The intriguing factor of the novel is what happens to her between this interval of time. The novel has been a favourite among all those who love fantasy filled stories and almost every kindergarten kid grows up listening to dear Alice's adventures.

Now unlike everyone else, I never really got to read the story upto now. It was my intention to read it a long time ago but the factor of procrastination delayed the inevitable upto this date. After finally tasting Lewis Carrol classic work I must admit, I am highly taken in with Alice, the world she falls into through the rabbit hole and everything that happens to her from the Giant Queen to the talking tortoise.

This book is definitely going to find a place of honour in my reading shelf and will be read again in the near future when I need a dose of fantasy and myth.

The story of "Alice in Wonderland" begins with Alice spending some quiet time in the meadows when she notices a rabbit. The unusual thing about this long eared mammal was that it was wearing a suit and a had a watch as well. She follows it into a rabbit hole where she enters the realm of another world where bizarre is normal, animals converse in a knowledgeable manner and everything that can be mentioned in the breath of being a fantasy is real.

There are talking cats that disappear all leaving only their grin behind as a haunting reminder of their presence, sneezing babies that turn into pigs and smoking caterpillars. The queen of the land is a cranky creature who does not hesitate before ordering someone to be decapitated while there are door mice with sleeping disorders who hang out with nutty hatters and crazy hares. Alice drinks a potion which turns her into a giant and then also into a midget.

All of this may sound like gibberish but the wonderful thing about it, is that it is nonsense that actually starts making sense once you start reading the book. So go out to the nearest bookstore and pick yourselves a copy of "Alice the Wonderland" and trust me, it will be worth the trip.

The difference between the literal and actual meanings of words, expressions and everyday sayings truly opens your mind, Alice's adventures in wonderland is a clever and fascinating book that i will no doubt read many times again.

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วันเสาร์ที่ 22 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556

William Trevor's audition at canasta: things are only ever finished, but never end with?



I remember reading the story "the garden party Katherine Mansfield" and the sixth form during the lesson and finding an impressionistic style, his indirect Sun and terrifying weapon yet. The young heroine of Mansfield discovers Laura's death [centralites] the existence of sound slow, elegiac story one summer afternoon Games reveals la inexpressibility of front of vtchnologiia life. No life-Laura tries to say near the end; And the ability to add a question mark, a sudden humility.

William Trevor is his celebrated novels short stories, who investigate the problem and troubled relations between past and present. Things are only ever finished, never finished with Chronicles of Trevor revisitation of this truth, and it is gentle but continuous illuminates all stories that persecutes the collection. People enmeshed with each other in ways to direct translation, such dependencies can still mute. define them

' Children ', the daughter of her father gently mourner sabotages the experience through reading the books of the new marriage her mother died every day. The time to collect the ends and to honour the memory of love's daughter who was even more well serve serve. "some jeeps for their finality of hierarchies is not allowed and must be ???????.

The research of visible Trevor ' adultery ' room reveals wife's novel unnervingly attempted to have her husband murdered a woman unresolved fears nine years before. He had an alibi's instinctive loyalty still such loyalty is finite, corrosive. People just leave the world of Trevor. The words and worlds, to run them. "The best thing was to love was not enough, he knows that. When love turns to irony, heroes of the Trevor looks more isolated, lonely than ever.

This latest collection of short stories also includes one of the most brutal along ever read, and just deal with the infection of childhood friendship, through silence, the partnership. The "environment", two foil and Deux alienated childhood friends meet again by accident and the Backstreet cafe, barrels, and expected to know each other. Trevor bleakly exposes the arbitrary, cruel childhood event that looked and assessment. Two sons, wilby, Anthony was once named dog-friendly note, Jericho and one summer day old LILO, see it floating out to sea. ' Now the way already, the yellow of the blur on the water, LILO has been lost, there was again lost again and began barking and wail. ' we have here on the horizon of the literal ' lost ' innocence. Heroes of Trevor say anything and neither does he. It just shows us what the boys did as they could. Wilby grows and becomes a stamp collector, cruelty, the burden of the aberration. You must create contrasts, Anthony had left this period its esteem, the sensation of each believe it was dead behind. "I'm not dead," he says. But of course, it.

Each story in the collection explores the ways in which we leave each other and ourselves. Still stories of Trevor also indicate continuing preservation of intimacy and power after his death. Promises made and respected, follows the story of Trevor ' audition on the canasta and mourning of a widower at Venice his love of his wife, he remembers when her ticket was gradually of Alzheimer ' s reflections they interrupted by a married couple arguing the following table, his conversation with them as they leave, the flagship of all healing intuitive recognition of Trevor's narrative change but not defame or reduce it to mere certainty"Knowingness". "" Shame not bad, insists her voice from somewhere else. Nor did the humble gift. "Gift of Trevor is to listen to and discover the power of such revisitations.

I was an enthusiastic reader of short stories Guide for years to find the "free zone" of the genre sometimes subtle, sometimes arresting, sometimes breaking heart. My name is Janet, I tutor students Lewison United Kingdom Bolton through my tuition business NLP Tusitala, my confidence for life site. Short stories are a great way to give everyone permission to think and reflect it. Also find ever read.



วันอาทิตย์ที่ 9 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556

Black Milk



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Saadat Hassan Manto (1912__1954) was born in Sambrala (now part of East Punjab) on the 11th of May, 1912. He himself gave birth to 'Manto' as he neared the end of his schooldays. The first page of the book contains the following lines entitled as
" In memory of a conversation":

"The milk of human kindness... if

you'll pardon the clich?... flows in

the breast of every Manto character ..."

"Its colour will have to be black if society

is to accept that verdict..."

Manto is known for writing unspeakable truths, hidden and dark tales of mankind augmented with pessimism, reality and bleak side of life, depicting sociopolitical and historical events along with the shades of gender and racial discrimination, injustice, violence, and all that one could feel. He gives the voice to all such emotions and pent up feelings that everyone wants to express but is unaware of the channel to express, this is the reason his words coincide with thoughts of all folks irrespective of their social strata, language and culture. Most of his stories entails stream of consciousness, discovers all that runs through the mind of every human being.

He had strong conviction over his art of story telling as his own epitaph contains lines:
"Here lies Saadat Hassan Manto along with his art of story writing... even now under tons of earth he is wondering, who is greater story writer... he or God.

Most of his short stories have been written in the background of partition between India and Pakistan, cover numerous socio political issues in such a subtle and pithy manner that no one can math his mastery of weaving words within a tapestry.

"Sakina" is the story that unfolds grim picture of Indo-Pak partition (1947), along with the shattered drams and expectations associated with new land of freedom. This story reveals how trust of an elderly father is broken by his own companions, whom he thought of his saviors and confidants. In the opening lines we are told that the special train carrying refuges from Amritsar has arrived after eight hours at Mughalpura , beyond the new international border, first paragraph depicts the scene depicts the scene of looted, wounded and brutally killed people during the riots.

An old man Sirajuddin wakes up and finds himself laying on the cold damp ground of the refugee camp. All around him, he sees an agitated sea of humanity, men, women and children. He wants to think and recollect but his memory fades away. Images begin to form on the screen of his mind rioting, looting, fire, running, the railway station, gun fire, the dark night and... and Sakina. At once sirajuddin rises up to his feet and like a madman rushes into the masses of people around him.

Dejected by his missing daughter, he looks for someone to bring his daughter back. After some days he meets with a party of young men, who possess guns and a lorry. They after having got the description regarding Sakina promise him to locate her and bring her back.

But after locating Sakina they prove otherwise, instead of handed her to Sirajuddin, they ruthlessly use her and then caste her away near the rail tracks, where she is found lying unconscious. When she is brought to the refugee camp hospital, Sirajuddin recognizes her by the black mole on her pallid lifeless cheeks and creams with joy "Sakina.... Sakina." But quite shocking to the readers, when doctor examines the pulse of girl, looks at Sirajuddin and nodes his head towards the window "Open it" he says, the girl on stretcher i.e Sakina stirs, her hands move slowly and she opens the knot of her shalwar and pushes the garment down her thighs...
Old Sirajuddin face lights up with joy, "She's alive..." he shouts, "My daughter's alive..."
The doctor begins to drip with sweat.

The plight of helpless people migrating from one land to another is conveyed through a hair-raising event that leaves a lasting gloomy impact on readers. How human beings get turned into wild animals during any situation of chaos, when things fall apart and center cannot hold. One shudders deeply on looking through the windowpane opening into the time when a blood stained line was drawn between two civilizations and religions at the cost of several lives, sanctities and honors. When so many fathers lost their daughters and got their embodiments only, devoid of souls.

The usage of word "open it" entails symbolism and leads towards so many connotations and interpretations. Earlier this story was entitled as "Khol Do" while it was written in Urdu version, but when translated, its title was changed into "Sakina". This story is an index of how social fabric is destroyed when anarchy and disorder is prevalent in society, History discloses that aftermath of any war gives birth to lost generation, who have aimless lives and are subjected to agonies, immorality, dissatisfaction and anxiety.

This short story reflects the socio political and geographical condition of migrated people at the time of partition, religious and cultural differences that became the root cause for two separate realms. The na?ve and simple attitude of people, their blind trust on others, expectations and dreams regarding new liberated land, their capacity to sacrifice and sufferings. Then their exploitation and manipulation at the hands of authorities and people around them.

Title: BLACK MILK (an anthology of short stories)
Author: SAADAT HASSAN MANTO
Translated from Urdu by: HAMID JALAL
Genre: PROSE
Publisher: Sang_e_Meel Publications 1996
Pages: 187
Language : ENGLISH
Title of short story: SAKINA



วันเสาร์ที่ 25 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2556

The Writing Life of James Joyce



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Joyce's first major work, Dubliners, a collection of fifteen short stories, was published in 1914. They concentrate on the idea of an epiphany, a moment when the main protagonist gains self-awareness or understanding. The stories follow a logical order from childhood to adolescence to maturity and finally death, the last story being entitled "The Dead." "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man," an almost complete re-write of an abandoned novel called Stephen Hero was published in 1916. It is a biographical novel depicting the coming of age of a young man, Stephen Dedalus, the fictional alter ego of Joyce.

The book was to pioneer some of Joyce's modernist techniques that would be used widely in his later works, including interior monologue. His only published play, Exiles (1918) was a study of the husband/wife relationship. Joyce began work on his magnum opus, Ulysses, in 1914, completing it in 1921. It was published in 1922 by Sylvia Beach's Shakespeare and Company. In Ulysses, Joyce employs the technique of stream of consciousness and the action all takes place on one single day, 16 June 1904. The book consists of eighteen chapters, each roughly covering one hour of the day, beginning around 8am and finishing around 2am the following morning with each of the chapters employing its own literary style.

He began work on Finnegan's Wake in 1923, however progress was slow due mainly to declining health and failing eyesight, it was finally published in 1939. It abandoned all conventions of plot, character construction and the language used is peculiar and obscure.

Russell Shortt is a travel consultant with Exploring Ireland, the leading specialists in customised, private escorted tours, escorted coach tours and independent self drive tours of Ireland.
Article source: Russell Shortt, http://www.exploringireland.net/



วันอังคารที่ 14 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Hints of Hemingway: the excellence of its short stories



Ernest Hemingway once bet with a friend on a stressed. It was that he could not write a short story within the limit of six words or less demanding. Maybe the other guy was a real friend will not after all-who knew enough to know that the author also he built his reputation, he says more with fewer restrictions, and you just put the word count function a huge story its capabilities. The end result of this creative impetus was really the story of the infamous six-word-"for sale: baby shoes; Never worn "– Silver collection by American writer well-earned from his childish" Member. "

One cannot link all the short stories together as a generalization about what they are supposed to do or provide. What Hemingway did with the specific story was an absolute limit tracking what he always intended for his short fiction — that is, the maximum amount of story development, and emotion (pathos) with the least amount of forthright description, exhibitions. In this way, Hemingway was a puzzle like he was creating the following linear stories. He was saying just enough about a person or thing or a reader to think critically can collect whatever he or she needed to know about him or her. Meaning there were often indirectly accesses. One of my favorite examples of this is towards the end of the first short story, "the King of Aragon," where the young protagonist Nick Adams faces one traumatic moments and the pathos laden (many) of his life: meeting, almost violent and threatening a former boxer with his music videos. Hemingway never directly explains to Nick swimming fear; Instead, it uses the subtle linguistic cues that stimulate a feeling of numbness vlhrod boy is trapped beyond the event. He was clearly friendly man sandwich just seconds before and still connotes that "all Hemingway so ????????? that he remember this Act of kindness in his:" he found him in his hot sandwich and put it in his pocket. "keyword" is; "this is the discovery for Nick, that's not really what happened to him via his fear.

This form of writing is so much more interesting to so many more ways than explicitly stating something like, "I was very scared that he almost and Nick killed by someone crazy." instead, we have more exciting action, gently Nick staring at the feeling of being and feeling. Is numb it every moment, shocked. All we were here before. Glow of Hemingway is how is it that all of his short fiction. This, he creates puzzles are unlocked by the observant reader. The reader becomes a detective. If one does not put the effort Holmes-Ian searches for clues, one is staring at a blank, blank (very dull). Real emotion of Hemingway's stories is based on the characters what to say, and leave unsaid; Based on what the narrator explaining that the US chooses to, leaving just the perfect amount of detail part of a lifetime or a world of joy and suffering. The word "abortion" is not output once on "hills like white elephants," still dripping his haunting Specter of ghost story and emotion that he felt the man tries to convince him his wife, traditional woman is so sure the recommendations as they sit tensely in the city, vpkoka. Who is not completely lost clues within the Grove this scene.

Knowing this, one can use its own six stories to try and understand (or puzzles), such as: "pool of shoe; The American dream is dead "; Or "one set of", "Ocean, 1924." what they need to do is paint a picture of an aspect of life, emotional event, and can all relate to certain subject, perhaps. So many authors attempted to imitate the style of Mr. Hemingway concise after wake that is probably the most influential American writer of the century. But few succeed in penetrating the mysteries that he concocted and style for themselves. People are so reluctant to read conventional mysteries, straight-laced who populate directories, books, because they offer a clear solution and eventually, but also often explained, so required deducing turgidly. But if we are so fond of detective work, why should we not make one ourselves and follow the hints that Hemingway pushed us all so brilliant? This is much more rewarding in the end to find out the answer and meaning for yourself, instead of being ?"????? said; I promise you that.



วันศุกร์ที่ 3 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2556

A Review to "Everyday Use" by Alice Walker



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An African-American mother 'Mama Johnson' had experienced difficulties all her life during her upbringing. While her daughter 'Dee' who on the other hand had always received quality education from Augusta, Georgia and a superior life. Mama has one other daughter 'Maggie' whom she considers to be less fortunate. Maggie once became victim to a house fire, causing her to be disabled and the scars still remain on her face. Mama has always been saying that her child Maggie is the most generous of all while Dee has always been the bold and confident one.

The story begins when Maggie and Mama have taken all the necessary steps a day earlier in order to welcome Dee.

Dee has always wanted nicer things. Dee is told to be a bold and beautiful girl with fair skin, who apparently loves her sister but Maggie's less beauty, dark color and less intellectual properties have somehow caused Dee to adopt the superiority complex. Both the sisters seem complete opposite of each other. One is highly ambitious and bold while the other is equally unmotivated. Maggie's Burns have caused her the extreme troubles that she is often found in corners hiding away from the world.

Now as soon as Dee arrives, Maggie and Mama are amazed to see the charm and glory with which Dee has arrived. Dee tells them that she has changed her name now to 'Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo' which appears as some spelling mistakes to Mama.

Dee tries to steal the family's valuable crafts such as quilts and a churn as a memory of heritage from her family and to keep it as a d?cor in her home. She also laughs at Maggie for putting such valuables for Everyday use.

Mama and Maggie get irritated by Dee's insulting behavior. Mama at one stage becomes outraged and throws the quilt to Maggie's lap declaring that she won't let Dee take it away. Dee also gets frustrated. This is where Mama realizes the value of her dark, disabled daughter's mannerism against her Bold beautiful daughter.

This story is a very nice representative of the African-American social culture that in the pursuit of fame and fortune how aggressive, ill mannered one becomes. While in south the family and its values are important for them. Those who are ashamed of leaving their vales just try to put some traditional heritage for the ornament purpose, in their homes.

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วันเสาร์ที่ 20 เมษายน พ.ศ. 2556

A Feministic Study of "Wiser Than a God", A Short Story by Kate Chopin



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

A popular local colorist during her lifetime, Chopin is now recognized as an important figure in nineteenth-century American fiction and as a major figure in feminist literature. Born on February 8, 1851, in St. Louis, Missouri, she was the daughter of Thomas O'Flaherty, a prominent businessman, and Eliza Faris. Her best known work, The Awakening (1899), depicts a woman's search for sexual freedom in the repressive society of the American South during the Victorian era.

Throughout her literary career, Kate Chopin, much like her fictional heroines, explored dangerous new ground. She created female characters that test the boundaries of acceptable behavior for women and explore the psychological and societal ramifications of their actions and desires. They are forced to make existential choices based on the few avenues available for them to create and maintain autonomous identities outside of wife and mother in the late nineteenth-century American South. Chopin's protagonists attempt to physically or spiritually transcend these limitations but often meet with crushing results. Chopin does not guarantee her characters an admirable place within their society, but she portrays them with dignity and sympathy.

Kate Chopin began her writing career strikingly with the creation of a triumphant woman artist-Paula von Stolz-a character who seems to be a projection of the author's own ambitions. "Wiser than a God," Chopin's first story accepted for publication, portrays the resolution of the woman artist with utter confidence. The central conflict of the story involves the dilemma Paula faces when, after the death of her mother, she receives a marriage proposal from George Brainard, a wealthy, attractive man and must choose between a comfortable, conventional marriage and the career as a concert pianist for which she has spent her entire life preparing.

This article aims to study the important feminist notions and concepts such as "marriage", "Identity" and "Woman Figure" in the story of "Wiser than a God" based on feminist theories from Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex.

a. Marriage

Chopin introduces the institution of marriage as a choice rather than an absolute issue in a young woman's life in an early short story, "Wiser than a God." The story is prefaced with the ominous Latin proverb "To love and be wise is scarcely granted even to a god" (241). It is clear that in this story, love and wisdom will be mutually exclusive entities and one must choose between the two. Mary E. Papke suggests that in the story, "Chopin draws the mind/body split [....]" (38). The story centers on Paula, a beautiful young woman and extremely gifted pianist. She manages to shun romantic love in order to focus on her dream of a musical career until she meets George. George is very much in love with her and desperately wants to marry her. For the first time in her life she is conflicted about her future.

Paula begins to succumb to George's affection: "She felt such a comfort in his strong protective nearness" (246). She refuses, however, to marry George, claiming that marriage "doesn't enter into the purpose of my life" (249) -a shocking revelation. George does not understand Paula's ambition and passion for her music and the role that it plays in her life. According to Martha J. Cutter, "Perhaps in the end language is simply not important-she succeeds without it. But Paula continually finds her attempts to explain her needs are not heard at all; even her mother tells her not to 'chatter' (243). Paula attempts to explain to him how important it is to her and asks him, "Can't you feel that with me, it courses with the blood through my veins? That it's something dearer than life, than riches, even than love?"(249). George is taken aback by her fervent declaration and answers, "Paula, listen to me; don't speak like a mad woman" (249). It is clear that George represents societal views on marriage, and that Paula's depiction, is based on her sharp realization that she will lose herself if she becomes George's wife.

Although she does not marry George, Paula's assertion that, had she married him, she would have been expected to give up her music, is proven correct with the woman he eventually does wed. Although his new wife had been an avid dancer, she "abandoned Virginia break-downs as incompatible with the serious offices of wifehood and matrimony" (250). As much as this woman was expected to give up her love of dancing, Paula would have been expected to give up her music. Here, the author points out the irony of marriage. Instead of the role of wife conveying merely social and familial woman marries, will be the defining and only identity she will have ever again. According to Papke, "Paula [....] chooses to follow the purpose of her life though she be deemed a 'mad woman' by George and his type, to position herself in a state of insanity. By the conclusion, it is clear that the author believes Paula to be wiser than a god" (39). Paula, however, does sacrifice deeply. She lives solely by her intellectual, rational side, effectively ignoring the desires of her heart and body.

b. Identity

"Wiser than a God," Chopin's first story accepted for publication, portrays the resolution of the woman artist with utter confidence (Toth 2). The initial part of the story brings up some general facts and information about Paula's character as an artist who adores music.

These clues from the very beginning demonstrate the fact that music is merged with Paula's character and has granted an identity to her. It's obvious that by music she could display herself, and she could catch the attention of people around - whether in a party, in a society or in a town. These magnificent abilities could support Paula and distinguish her from the girls who lack this talent.

It is worth noticing that from the very first lines of the story, Chopin has also introduced music as a character along with Paula. Music is the soul that lives within Paula's body. In this way Chopin illustrates both music and Paula as central and significant matters in the tale.

The central conflict of the story involves the dilemma Paula faces when, after the death of her mother, she receives a marriage proposal from George Brainard, a wealthy, attractive man and must choose between a comfortable, conventional marriage and the career as a concert pianist for which she has spent her entire life preparing. Here Gorge's occurrence makes Paula to think of amity, affection and relation with an opposite sex. Therefore Paula at some moments after becoming familiar with George describes him as a handsome gentleman and compares him to other males that she is in relation; and approves that George is superior to them in look and appearance "He was so unlike any man of her acquaintance...she could at the moment think of no positive point of objection against him"(246). This womanly sensation that inevitably exists in Females' nature does not make Paula to yield. Paula doesn't want to sacrifice and annihilate her liberty and her identity that she achieved by hard practice in music. After her Mother's death she becomes more devoted to music which is the symbol of her true self and her autonomous identity. She prefers the dreamy world, which belongs to art and music, than the real and patriarchal world, which belongs to George and his society. She believes living in moments without music is equal to extinction, annihilation and "deterioration" (248). But George expects that Paula will be willing to give up her musical calling for "the labor of loving" instead (248). He proposes to her, never fully comprehending her devotion to her art or realizing that it could conflict with her devotion to a man. Paula, who admires George, is thrilled at his request but realizes that they must part. She doesn't allow George to separate her from her autonomous identity; even when she comprehends that George is tempting her, she shushes him up and tells "don't tempt me further" (249). That's why when George wants her to answer whether she is marring him or not, she couldn't answer him confidently and she asks George to give a one week interval to her to think. George believes that he is the 'Subject' and the 'Absolute'; for him Paula is the 'Other' not the 'Self' who could have an independent identity that could decide either to get married or to stay single. He couldn't understand Paula because her character is imperceptible and unclear for him and for his society. When Paula says that marriage has no place and no position in her life, he never understands; because the society that George belongs to is occupied with girls and women who yearn for people like George to propose or marry them; so he says "Paula listen to me; and don't speak like a mad women"(249).

George suddenly and unexpectedly sees someone different from the girl he had known as Paula begins to talk about the purpose of her life with her "father's emotional nature aroused in her" (249). Paula makes a passionate defense of her art, something she knows she cannot understand:

What do you know of my life,' she exclaimed passionately. 'What can you guess of it? Is music anything more to you than the pleasing distraction of any idle moment? Can't you feel that with me, it courses with the blood through my veins? That it's something dearer than life, than riches, even than love?(249)

George's reply to this-"don't speak like a mad woman"-betrays his incomprehension and his belief that a woman who gives herself so passionately to artistic pursuit, particularly at-the expense of a potential husband, must be insane. Until now he has known Paula only as the "daughter of the undemonstrative American woman'' (249).

Paula's abilities increase in the absence of a male muse; and her loneliness and seclusion is often itself perceived as a final revolt against the society that has refused to provide her an acceptable space within which to pursue her creative inclinations. Paula's struggle to attain her full potential as an individual is thus best perceived as deeply related to her efforts to develop her creative abilities, to grow her art, and to discover an affirming place within her world.

In this early story, Kate Chopin explores art as a kind of divine bondage, as suggested in the epigraph, "To love and be wise is scarcely granted even to a God.'' Paula does love and feels physically attracted to George but is wise in her decision not to marry him. She is an exceptional woman and has the wisdom to recognize that "the purpose of her life" would be destroyed by marrying him (249). The story, rather than focusing on Paula's moment of public triumph, shows Paula beset with temptation in her most vulnerable moment. By choosing to become a concert pianist instead of George's wife, Paula satisfies both her own ambitions and her parents' and thus keeps a meaningful connection to them even in their death. Seyersted notes that "Wiser Than a God" has certain affinities with de Stael's Corinne in George's momentary belief that he can accept a wife who does not live solely for him and his family but that it also shows a pronounced difference in Chopin's heroine's ability to resist romantic temptation: "unlike the French heroine... Paula tells her suitor that life is less important to her than the unhampered exertion of what she considers her authentic calling and her true self"(105).

Paula knows herself, and thus is able to avoid the trap that marriage to George would have become for her. Self-knowledge, Chopin implies, is the most important attribute of the woman artist. By listening to her own heart and instincts, Paula turns away an inappropriate mate and gains the possibility of union with a man who is talented in his own right and who is willing to let her pursue her career to its fullest. At the end of the story, Paula is resting "after an extended and remunerative concert tour," and Max Kunstler, her former harmony teacher, is still following her "with the ever persistent will-the dogged patience that so often wins in the end" (250).

"Wiser than a God" was a triumphant beginning to Chopin's publishing career. Never again did Chopin present the resolution and success of the woman artist so confidently and without compromise. Paula achieves fame, wealth and love. Paula seems a kind of fantasy for Chopin, an empowering wish-fulfillment, a visualization of what the woman with artistic ambitions might accomplish. This story shows the resolution of the woman artist as Chopin wishes it to be, and it implies that a woman might achieve success and fame without having to give up everything else.

"Wiser than a God" is an example of what Julia Kristeva identifies as "an imaginary story through which she [the woman writer] constitutes an identity" (166). Chopin allows none of her other women artist characters such success, however. This indicates the realization of the autonomous female artist by indicating Paula's increased awareness of self even within the current restrictions of her society. A woman who wishes to become an artist as well as a self-reliant individual faces a double challenge in the historical context of the story. Paula establishes the possibility that the future female artist will be able to assume a respected place within her society and to maintain productive relationships that support aesthetic creativity.

c. Woman Figure

"Wiser Than a God" contains Chopin's most outspoken demonstration of the self-sufficient woman. It is the only story she provided with a motto and her one example of what can be considered quite overt feminism, and the picture of the girl who becomes a famous pianist suffers from the strong emphasis. (Per Seyersted 117)

The acceptable role that a patriarchal society defined for a woman is that, a woman is the mistress of the house and she has to obey her husband, and take care of the house and her children. She is only allowed to interfere with the house chores, kitchen and cuisine; as Michael Warton in his article notes that: "Culturally, women are associated with the home, defining it but, crucially not owning it" (106).

In spite of Charles insistence to marry Paula, Paula prefers her solitude and wishes to be at the service of herself rather than others. She never accepts to shoulder the responsibilities of housekeeping and motherhood. She is an emancipated woman who doesn't care for society's expectations and regulations. Paula largely answers to Simone de Beauvoir's definition of the emancipated woman that is, a female who "wants to be active, a taker, and refuses the passivity man means to impose on her"; who insists on the active transcendence of a subject, the pour soi, rather than the passive immanence of an object, the en soi; and who attempts to achieve an existentialist authenticity through making a conscious choice, giving her own laws, realizing her essence, and making herself her own destiny (Seyersted 104).

Ultimately, Paula reaches her goal, that is musical profession; and in her progress she achieves fame, popularity, and independence; the factors that a feminine woman lacks (Simone de Beauvoir's definition for a feminine woman is: the woman who lets the men decide her destiny). The pride indicated in Paula's family name does not manifest itself in a haughty attitude toward her admirer; she is soft-spoken compared to the impetuous, youthful George who insists that she is throwing him into "a gulf... of everlasting misery." But she speaks up when she realizes they are in two different worlds, that he represents the patriarchal view of woman, and she the view of Margaret Fuller that women so inclined should be allowed to leave aside motherhood and domesticity and instead use their wings to soar toward the transcendence of a non biological career. [...]George for a moment believes he can accept a wife who lives not solely for him and his children; [...], Paula tells her suitor that life is less important to her than the unhampered exertion of what she considers her authentic calling and her true self.( Seyersted 103-5)

In the story we could witness the presence of feminine Victorian woman, like Paula's mother, who is a widow and a devoted wife. She has bestowed her life for training her child and she never remarried even after years of her husband's death. George's wife is the other sample of typical Victorian woman who is ironically mentioned in the last lines of the story; that she was a professional dancer but she "abandoned Virginia break-downs as incompatible with the serious offices of wifehood and matrimony" (250). So Paula, the only emancipated woman in the story, never agrees to play the role of her mother in future and she never accepts to play the role of a submissive wife for George.