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Literary Monster In Sendak's Where The Wild Things Are

Decent Essays

The summer term was pretty short and it was very intense to boost the writing skill to a totally different level. The writing skill is a combination of the wording skill, sentence skill, and critical thinking. It’s very unlike to increase all of them in such a short period of time. However, my critical thinking skill improved a lot in this month. Literary monster is an interesting topic and we read and watched many different type of monsters in different ways. Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are really gives me a chance to think more critically, because the whole story is just several page of comic. I used to have a pretty bad analyzing skill, especially for those books with very little words or images. This work has particularly limited images …show more content…

When Ann is brought to the cliff to watch the sunset. And before that, Ann is trying to entertain King Kong through her acrobatic skill, but King Kong doesn’t like it. Instead, King Kong laughs when Ann trips herself. The difference in race keeps the distance. However, when they looks at the sunset, Ann is amazed by the beauty of the nature and shouts “beautiful”. King Kong seems remember this word and when it brings Ann to watch the sunrise, it is trying to say that word even though a gorilla is unable to pronounce it. I found this scene extremely romantic. The cross racial love is so precious, because there are so many obstacle between the two different races. They speak differently, act differently, and feel differently. When King Kong is enjoying playing with Ann by pushing her down ,Ann becomes angry and stops King Kong, which triggers King Kong’s anger. After King Kong gives vent to those stones, its eyes reveal the sadness because Ann doesn’t understand its feeling. However, when they look at the sunrise for the last time, King Kong is trying to express the feeling of “beautiful” and Ann understands what it thinks this time. Therefore, I think it is particularly difficult for these two characters to be empathy. This scene reflects the beauty of

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