To summarize, “Go Ask Alice” is the diary of an anonymous adolescent girl, whom will call Alice. Alice focuses on a variety of difficult adolescent issues: her crush, parents, school, sexuality, and weight. When Alice learns that her father accepts a teaching position at a university and the family will move at the start of the new year, her spirts pick up. The move proves to be difficult for Alice, and she begins to feel like an outcast when the rest of her family adjusts to the move. Eventually, Alice becomes friends with Beth and the two become best friends. However, when summer comes Beth leaves for camp and Alice goes to stay with her grandparents. After Alice arrives at her grandparents, she is bored but soon reunites with Jill, an …show more content…
Chris smokes marijuana, and Alice goes back on drugs. The police raid Chris’s house and the girls are put on probation. However, Alice continues to do drug. She decides to leave and travels with other drug users to Oregon. While at a Salvation Army, Alice meets Doris, a sexual abuse victim, who lets her stay with her. Together, Alice and Doris hitchhike to southern California, where Alice takes prostitutes herself for drugs. Alice talks with a priest about teen runaways, and he calls her parents. They want her to come home. When Alice returns home, she vows to quit drugs and start over with her family. She is happy, expect for her social isolation. She avoids the drug users, and the “straight” students don’t want anything to do with her. Around this time her grandfather dies due to a stroke. She imagines his body underground being disturbed by maggots and worms. She builds a relationship with her father and spends her time at his university, where he is a professor. In the university library, Alice meets Joel. He meets her family and they approve of him. She begins to fall for him, and dreams about marrying him. Soon after, Alice's grandmother dies. Joel, whose mother has passed away, has a long talk about death with Alice. She shares her passed and he is
Maureen also creates a dream of her own, and wants nothing more than to go back to California. Though Maureen was young when her and her family lived in California, this is the only place that she wanted to go. Jeannette and Lori tell Maureen of the great times that they had in California and explain to Maureen that she has such blonde hair because of all the gold in California, and blue eyes because of the ocean. Maureen responds, “’[California] is where I’m going to live when I grow up’” explains Walls (207). The stories that Jeannette and Lori tell are responsible for Maureen’s dream to go back to California. However, it seems that Maureen takes after her parents, and struggles to fulfill her dream. While Lori, Jeannette, and Brian go off and start their new lives, Maureen is stuck back in Welch. Lori and Jeannette decide that Maureen should move to New York with them, so they make arrangements and Maureen goes to live with Lori, and begins going to college. Things are going great up until Rex and Mary move to New York. It is at this time that Maureen seems to give up on her schooling. After Lori kicks her out, Maureen spends her days living with Rex and Mary in a squatter apartment. She wastes her days away by smoking cigarettes, reading, painting, and sometimes just sleeping away the day. Jeannette tries to help Maureen by talking to
Anyway, Alice gets on a computer in the back of the lab and starts to look for the email “she sent to her mother”. The email was written exactly how she would write and email to someone; lowercase letters, signed ally, no dear…. and she even believed that she committed the crime. Then she put in the disk that her father wanted her to bring. She reads about her father and his brother but the information is not enough to find out who could possible kill her father. Soon she has to leave and she decides to print out the document. Once the document is printed out, she leaves, lucky for her she doesn’t need to use a student ID to exit the lab. She meets up with Paul and she tries to get rid of him. Fortunately, she gets a place where she can sleep over for the night. When morning hits the radio is on and the owner of the room is in the bathroom probably listening
Go Ask Alice is a 1971 book about the life of a troubled teenage girl. The book continues its claim to be the actual diary of an anonymous teenage girl who became addicted to drugs. Beatrice Sparks is listed as the author of the book by the U.S. Copyright Office. The novel, whose title was taken from a line in the Grace Slick, penned Jefferson Airplane song "White Rabbit", "go ask Alice/when she's ten feet tall", is presented as an anti-drug testimonial. The memoirist's name is never given in the book.
The main character, Charlie must navigate through it even while feeling motionless and scared. He tells his story to the reader from his perspective. The reader sees life from exactly the way he sees the events and understands those events through a teenage boy’s eyes. The crisis is introduced when the town outcast Jasper Jones asked Charlie, a bookish young nobody of a boy for help. The reader sees Charlie’s internal conflicts of wanting to go with Jasper, feeling terrified, excited yet so wanting to be accepted by him Charlie does in fact sneak out in the middle of the night with his new friend. Jasper takes Charlie to the scene of the crime where Jasper’s girlfriend is hanging from a tree. The manner that Silvey describes Charlie’s reaction to the hanged girls is true to human nature, “I’m screaming, but they are muffled screams. I can’t breathe in. I feel like I’m underwater. Deaf and drowning.” This description foreshadows the solution to hide the body and Jasper and Charlie throw Laura Wishart into the lake. Unknown to either is Laura Wishart’s sister, Eliza. She witnessed the suicide of her sister and wrote the word “sorry” on the stump of the tree before she leaves. Charlie and Jasper find this word, assume that the killer wrote it there, and immediately jump to the
She becomes very reactive and unapologetic. Her final step in harming her marriage is stonewalling. Alice starts to pull away from Michael and his love. He wants to help her, but she is not ready to accept that yet. She makes is difficult for the entire family to heal by doing this. She becomes withdrawn and pushes away those who love her. These things are very are very apparent in this couple’s relationship.
Alice has gone though a lot, but things start to go well for her. She’s with Joel, her family loves her, and she’s friends with kids that don’t smoke or drink. She stops writing in a diary, but dies a few weeks later because of an overdose. Either she was drugged or she started doing drugs again.
Anna is Alice’s oldest daughter; she’s a successful lawyer and is married to Charles, also a lawyer. Anna is strong and fiercely independent just like her mother. Anna deals with her mother’s disease by suggesting that if her mom “thinks for a second” then maybe she’ll be able to remember things (p. 173). Anna, however still makes time to care for her mom when her dad is away.
When Alice begins to grow forgetful at first she discards it, but when she gets lost in her own neighborhood, she realizes that something is terribly wrong. She didn't want to become someone people avoided and feared. She wanted to live to hold her daughter, Anna’s, baby and know she was holding her grandchild. She wanted to watch her youngest daughter, Lydia act in something she was proud of. She wanted to see her son, Tom, fall in love. She wanted to be able to read every book she could before she could no longer read. Alice once placed her worth and identity in her academic life, now she must examine her relationship with her husband, her expectations of her daughters and son and her plans for herself. “Losing her yesterdays, her short-term memory hanging on by a couple of frayed threads, she
This screenplay follows the protagonist Alice Howland, who is a professor of linguistics at Columbia University. Alice Howland is later diagnosed with Early Onset Alzheimer’s Disease, which turns her world completely upside down; especially given her career and ambitious nature. She becomes unable to perform normal everyday activities, and struggles with the loss of her independence. Alice’s husband, John, who is a physician, attempts to act as a guide for her through this time, but it ultimately puts a strain on their relationship. John’s job offer to move to Boston does not help matters either, and it quickly becomes the last straw for the two of them. He soon moves to New York to take the job after Alice’s memory starts to decay at a faster rate. John and Alice have 3 children, Lydia, Anna, and Tom as well as a son-in-law, Charlie. They are introduced at the beginning of the screenplay, as they all gather to celebrate Alice’s 50th birthday at a restaurant. This is also the time in which the audience notices her decline in normal conversation as she is unable to follow smoothly. Alice could be considered the catalytic hero of this screenplay, and the disease being the antagonist. Alice wants to hold on to as much of her memory that she can, and slow the regression by writing down everything. By Act 3, Alice loses her ability to do activities that she had been doing for many years; such as going out for her morning run without getting lost, remembering words, phrases, and
Around family, she is interactive and playful. With relatives, she is also interactive and talks a lot with her cousins. On the other hand, with siblings she likes to play, and usually she gets into an argument with her younger sister, Megan. Alice does not usually resolve problems on her own. “She lets time go by and when that anger or annoyance passes, she will go out and be happy again,” says her older sister, Brenda. She also stated that Alice is very introverted and has become less confident due to her having braces, and now glasses. “Self-esteem generally remains high during elementary school but becomes more realistic and nuanced as children evaluate themselves in various areas” (Berk, p. 476). Alice is usually happy and because of school, she is stressed. “I could not stress enough how much she hates school,” says Brenda. While doing homework, she is usually uninterested and barely tries her best. As if, she wants to get it over with. The signs observed concerning poor emotional adjustment is when she is called to do her homework or clean up. She begins to make “annoyed” facial expressions and does not try her
“Life is really unbearable ,Now time seems so endless yet so fast’’(Sparks ,1996, p.35).Go ask Alice is a story that explains the life of a girl that went down a path she never wanted to end up on all due to drugs. She can barely get back on the right track, but with the help of her family and friends by her side she might be able to come back. This would explore the ways this book is a good way to teach people the outcome of drug abuse. It will also give a brief summary of book banning, and this book is a good way to learn the effects of drugs on a family. In order to teach people the outcome of drugs abuse and the effects of drugs on a family go ask Alice should not be banned or censored.
She drowns herself to avoid them, thinking of the picture she painted for the man she loved – who accused her of witchcraft. In 1947 London, ALICE becomes a governess to leave London/her past behind (she killed schoolmate GINNY who found out she was having an affair with her teacher ROBERT. Alice is left with his baby when he dies in WWII; her parents urge her to have an abortion performed by a Vet; she miscarries.) Houseman TOM drives her to gothic Winterbourne Hall.
truly hard battle in order for her to start a normal life again. Alice tries very hard, but the
A major influence on Alice's identity was when she was a young child and her grandmother would tell her stories about events that occurred in Cambodia. In Alice's teenage years, her beloved grandmother has a stroke, developed disabilities and eventually had passed away. It is around this time where serious psychological problems occur for Alice. This almost forces her into a mental state in which she knows she does not fit in with the Australian culture. She believed she had to do everything she could to change that otherwise Alice knew she would break down mentally. Alice was forced to attempt to fit the social standards of Australia.
Before seeking treatment, Alice’s struggles are pretty evident. I think the struggles are the most evident when looking at Jess. You can tell that she knows her mom is not well and that she worries about her. She watches her struggle to get out of bed in the morning, and voices her worries to Michael when she does not come home when she is supposed to. Trying to find a solution to their struggles, Michael suggests that they rearrange his flight schedule and take a trip to Mexico. While there, Alice continues her heavy drinking and reckless behavior. This results in her falling out of a rowboat, into the water and if not for Michael jumping in to save her, drowning. This event scared the two of them enough to realize that she had a problem and needed to start putting in some serious effort to stop.