Tenacity: “A Tree Grows In Brooklyn” “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn” by Betty Smith, is a novel that showcases the lives of a poor family living in Brooklyn and the people that are connected to them. The story revolves around a young girl Francie and about the different hardships her family and she goes through. The main theme of this book is tenacity and is shown by the many ways the Nolans find happiness. The word tenacity means determination, which is a quality the Nolans exhibit throughout the story. In the book they are faced with many hardships, yet they always find a way to tread around a problem when they are with each other. At one point, Francie explains, ‘“People always think that happiness is a faraway thing," thought Francie, "something
Trees represent her life because they aren’t simple. Trees are large and strong, their roots are in the ground and their leaves sway in the sky. At first, Melinda’s life was as solid as the tallest tree in the world. “This was the girl who suffered through Brownies with me, who taught me how
“Connecticut, pine trees in back” by Alex DuBois is a personal narrative that goes through his hardships. He goes deep within his memories and pulls the readers attention by using a special choice of words, these words being explicit as you would not normally see in other writings. This is why his personal narrative is so special. In my creative writing, I rewrote his piece and put it in my own memories. I chose to write in this genre like DuBois to express my life like he did. He was very clear and precise on his memories of his life and I tried to act the same. Here is the analytical statement of “the escape” by Trevor Folts.
The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, is her first novel, published in 1988. It is a novel that tells the story of a young girl who leaves her hometown to create a new life for herself. Along her journey, she finds a group of friends who offer endless love and support, allowing her to fulfill a happy life. Although she is presented with many obstacles, she is determined to continue her journey, in which she is faced with a lift-changing decision. Taylor Greer, the protagonist in the novel, must take on the challenges of motherhood and accept her newfound responsibilities. In the novel, The Bean Trees, the author uses the key literary elements of setting, character development, and theme to create interest in a young woman’s journey through life.
In this story “The Bean Trees” by Barbara Kingslover we meet Taylor Greer, an average teenager from Pittman, Kentucky. Even though Taylor has never been through anything truly horrific in her life how can she truly understand how unpleasant the world can be? Taylor’s personal growth in the “The Bean Trees” is a part of an uncertain journey because Taylor is thrown into motherhood and forced to see the bad experiences people go through in life.
Anaïs Nin dared to question the norm of society; she asked “how wrong is it for a woman to expect the man to build the world she wants, rather than to create it herself?” The two main characters in the novel, The Bean Trees, written by Barbara Kingsolver, are two young women who share a common struggle, Taylor Greer and Lou Anne Ruiz. The book changes protagonist between Taylor and Lou Anne whom are complete opposites. However they both deal with their hardships together in Tucson, Arizona. Most women end up pregnant and dependent on their spouse just like Lou Anne. Both of these protagonists learn from each other to improve their lifestyles. Women are not dependent on men; life is what you decide to do not society’s trends.
Speak Essay “ A sure cure for seasickness is to sit under a tree” (Spike milligan). Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson is about a girl named Melinda that got raped at a party, ever since then she lost all her friends and struggled talking to people in high school. The tree in the book Speak is a motif in the story that symbolizes the growth of Melinda. First, she is assigned to draw a tree and thought it was too easy, Then, she tried stepping it up by adding color to the tree, finally, she built confidence in herself and agreed that she can do a better on drawing a tree.
The novel Seedfolks by Paul Fleischman, is about a Vietnamese girl named Kim who started a garden in honor of her father. Many different people joined the garden,creating a community, and learning the importance of life. Seedfolks talks about the importance of diversity, segregation, meeting new people, and family. The book also sees through different people's views of the world and the community garden which is located on Gibb Street in Cleveland, Ohio. In the book, a theme that occurs through everybody's perspective is family. Family is one of the most important things in life because they can help you even in the darkest of times. People in Seedfolks, all mention their family and how they played a role in their lives, this shows that family can inspire you to make a change. Family helps you be the best person you can be and influence you to do something great. There are multiple characters who bring out the theme of family, they include: Kim, Maricela, Leona, Amir, and Florence.
The pear tree is her inspiration and her first true desire. She longs to bud and blossom, like the tree, and cannot wait to discover herself and all the wonders of the world.
The pear tree experience, along with her Grandmother’s words to her, help Janie determine her expectations for her future relationships. The pear tree experience establishes the feeling she seeks for the rest of her life, as she wants just as intimate of a relationship as the bee and the flower. Janie’s grandmother’s initial goals for Janie are inscribed in Janie’s original ideals, even though she denies it. Her grandmother’s original intent by marrying her off to Logan, besides for her safety, was to find her a way out of the working life, and into one where she would be allowed to relax, and escape the life of toil that both Leafy and Nanny suffered through. While Janie
Betty Smith’s classic tale A Tree Grows in Brooklyn utilizes an assortment of intriguing, relatable characters to tell the emotional tale of a young girl, born into the depths of poverty, and to detail the traumatic life events that occur that shape her into her future self. Set in impoverished Williamsburg, Brooklyn, 1912, this story centers around the Nolan family: hardworking, tough mother Katie, impractical and romantic father Johnny, momma’s boy Cornelius “Neeley”, and the protagonist, eleven-year old Mary Frances “Francie”, a sharp-witted, loyal daydreamer through whom the reader sees life occur throughout the book. Francie’s ability to daydream about a greater life for her and her family help her to escape
As the boy grows, he gets into romantic relationships and doesn’t spend much time with the Tree eventually, the boy goes away for a very long time, and that upsets the Tree very much. One day the boy comes back to visit the Tree, but he does not want to play, he wants money, he has no money, so he asks the tree for money. But the Tree has no money, so she tells the boy to take her apples and sell them in
Human nature is known to have two sides, strength and weakness, but an individual’s weakness is often acknowledged more than their triumphs. In both A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain, show how the weakness of human nature affects an individual’s persona. Although the strengths of human nature is a powerful part of an individual’s identity, I believe that weakness is displayed and taken in account more often.
The Giving Tree is a modern children literature written by Shel Silverstein, which is also one of his first successful piece of work. It is about an apple tree who always gives and gives and a boy who always takes and takes. This might be another story to read before bed times for the kids but however, it portrays so many things, from deforestation to modern society. Personally, I believe that The Giving Tree portrays the theme of selflessness versus selfishness, like the unconditional love a parent has for his or her child.
The daylight is dim. Dark, and gloomy. The trees are dense and haunting. The tall lifeless trees with bare broken limbs surround a lady with a babushka, black coat, and leather gloves. The lady is looking down. Her emotionless face shows of a lady that has been suffering for a lifetime. The younger lady next to her is a nun wearing a religious habit looking down and away. Her face shows of sorrow as well. She looks as if she is praying and wondering how the world could be so cruel. The trees are skinny and tall that tell a true story. The trees show the hatred, sorrow, poverty, and hardships of the past. It’s an eerie forest that looks as if it’s from a fictional movie such as Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings. It’s as if a concentration camp would be near the forest if the scene was 25 years sooner. It’s hardly a forest at all. It’s a place where two ladies are sitting beside the grave of their family.
The poem "Tree at my Window" was written by Robert Frost, an America poet who was born in 1874 and died in 1963 (DiYanni 624). The narrator in this poem appears to be speaking to the "tree at my window"; then, repeating the phrase in reverse order, he calls it the "window tree," as if to emphasize the location and nearness of the tree. Calling the tree a "window tree," might also suggest that this tree is something he sees through, perhaps to some higher truth, to something beyond the mere physical presence of the tree.