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Thursday, March 24, 2016

Extended Metaphor for Courage

               Courage
    Courage is a man
    Not a god but not human
    He stays strong when others won't
    He sacrifices himself for the good of others


   Courage is a boy
   who wants his father to come home
   from the horrible incident at the twin towers
   He waits with a calm demeanor for another call from his      father
   but he doesn't get one


  Courage is the father
  who sits in his office as his world
  crumbles to the ground
  breaking
  crashing
  He stays calm even when he knows
  he might not see his son ever again


  Courage is the mother
  who buries an empty casket
  but remains smiling
  so her son
  can move on


  Courage is staring death straight in the face
  and accepting it
  embracing it

  Courage is me
  and you
  and her
  and him

  Courage is us

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Found poem

Loneliness associated with emptiness
Talking people and friends surround me
Meaning empty and alone
Feel myself dissapear
Understand secrets and the truth
Experience loss of identity and power

Friday, February 12, 2016

Reader's Response


My Reader’s response is based on a quote. When Ed thinks about killing the father he says, “What would you do if you were me? Tell me. Please tell me! Your fingers turn the strangeness of these pages that somehow connect my life to yours. Your eyes are safe. The story is just another few hundred pages of your mind. For me, it’s here. It’s now. I have to go through this, considering the cost at every turn” (Zusak 89).
            This quote really gets me thinking. It is not very often that you see the narrator address the reader. Most times when I read, I don’t worry about their choices or how I would deal with them. This narrator makes you think about if it was the reader who went through this. The narrator says that this is just a book to us. These pages are just pages nothing more. For him to ask us what we would do, it makes us think. What would we do? When I read that, it forced me to think what I would do in that situation. Kill the rapist or set him free? It is a difficult question and the narrator asks it to me. It makes me wonder what I would do when in this dilemma.
              
           I have read books that have addressed the reader. Yet, this actually made me consider what Ed was asking. It makes me realize how grateful I should be. I’m just reading a fictional story while Ed is living a nightmare. How would I react? Being asked this question took the breath out of me.

I can visualize very well when reading. I can hear his words in my head. To me he sounds desperate and to be addressed like that is unsettling. I have never had to make a decision this big yet here I am being asked to. The crazy thing is that this is just a book but it feels like a real person is asking me this.
          It is very hard in books to ask or tell the reader something. It is also weird for the character to acknowledge that they are in a book. I think the author was trying to make it seem real. By asking us the question, he gives us a closer connection to the book. We are living in the story now. That just amazes me. This book has astounded me with their use of words. It is amazing that the character can come across with so much emotion that you feel it too. It isn’t just about the character any more. It is about us.

I always wonder what the character is going to do next in a tough situation. Now it is up to me, up to every reader, to decide. I know many authors that can make readers cry with their sad stories. They know how to make the readers feel emotion over the book. The best way though to make a reader feel emotion is to put them in the story and let them experience it themselves.