Did you know that everyone have a major conflict in everyone’s life and the solution to these problem may take time to resolve on it’s on? Although most conflicts from both books, Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom and The Diary of Anne Frank by Anne Frank, are different from each other but there is one conflict that they share in common which is internal problems. The major conflict in Tuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom is that Mitch struggles to find what is his meaning in his life and his solution to this problem is taking advices from his professor Morrie, which helps him contact his brother. The major conflict in The Diary of Anne Frank is that her ethnicity is Jewish and she struggles to continue to survive. However the solution in The Diary of Anne Frank is that Anne imagine a dream of her living in her house peacefully before she die. …show more content…
For example, on page 37, Morrie said “I knew Mitch, you mustn’t be afraid of my dying.” This tells me that Professor Morrie is like a father figure to Mitch since his childhood and Mitch was kicked out of his house by his father since Mitch mentioned his dead mother. Another example, on page 190, Mitch said “not long after Morrie’s death, I reached my brother in Spain.” This shows that after Morrie passed away, Mitch wants to unite with his younger brother so he won’t feel lonely and hopeless like how the disease is slowly staring to kill him. To sum it up, this paragraph supports that the conflict in Tuesday with Morrie is that Mitch struggles finding meaning in his life and his solution to this problem is to take advice from Morrie which helps him contact his
In the popular book and story of Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl there are many themes present throughout her journal. It’s a touching piece of literature that puts things into perspective about family, warfare, loneliness, and selfishness. Her diary gives insight about people who are actually living in those circumstances from Anne’s point of view, resulting in a more factual story than fictional novels loosely based on true events. Anne goes through a lot during her time in the Annex, including tense arguments with her family, bombings, thieves, Peter, and Dussel moving in. The events may not seem like that big of a deal in the grand scheme of things, but to a young girl, it’s a huge change of events. It shows a lot from her in the way she acts, Anne’s selfishness proving that stress and war can change people to be more selfish.
The first part of the diary starts with her being a regular girl having fun and turns into a girl going into hiding with seven other people. In addition, she has to deal with relation problems with her mom, sister, and the people she is in hiding with. The problems begin when eight people are confined in a small area and everybody begins to irritate and annoy one another. Anne was especially concerned with herself and with her attitude towards the others in the group. She's mainly concerned with her mother who always treats her like baby. Mr. Frank tires to ease the quarrels between them by telling Anne to help out more around the house, but Anne stubbornly declines preferring to concentrate more on her studies. She especially gets plenty of confrontations with Mrs. Van Daan who thinks she is a spoiled little girl. Mrs. Van Daan constantly tells Anne’s father, “ If Anne were my daughter.” Anne’s respond to this in her diary was, “Thank heavens I’m not!” Of course