Hello im Jack Meland and I choose the book “The Rivalry” by John Feinstein, because of the imprinted football on the front cover it really felt like it was going to be touching and a great story . I gave it a 4 star review because it was a little all over the place.However, I love how the book is a little of everything action, sports, mystery, romance, and drama and I think everyone will like the book if they are interested in reading. It’s nice how it’s written because it leaves a cliffhanger on every page it feels like which is smart of Feinstein to keep the readers engaged. I have played football since I was in kindergarten so it seemed like a great book to relate to. The teenagers are young journalists, Stevie and Susan Carol write about a football games usually college football games. Their biggest story that they have to write is going to be the …show more content…
Later on in the third chapter it got way better it felt like you were actually in the book and talking to the characters. In the beginning it was telling about the characters, Stevie and Susan Carol’s childhood and how they both grew up with really football fan-a-tic parents and they grew into it. However, the title tricks you because Stevie and Susan Carol do not actually play football they are very smart young teenager journalists for college games like Navy, Army, Notre Dame, Air Force, Michigan, and UCLA. They choose reporting because they are adult looking and are really talented in writing. They write on how the refs did on penalties, how they players thought on how they and their team did during the game, gives her opinion on how exciting the game was and what happened, reports injuries. The writer writes with passion like she actually lived through all of these events. She makes the characters feel alive and like your right next to them, you feel what they feel with all the emotions, adjectives used in every
Published in 2008, The Forever War by Dexter Filkins compiles a series of vignettes that detail his encounters as a reporter in Iraq and in Afghanistan. Released a year after, director Kathryn Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker also examines a harrowing account of the conflicts in Iraq. Both works poignantly present the unbridled violence that plague the region, and the futility of a war embedded within a vicious cycle of retaliation. Nevertheless, the portrayal of vengeance as a major motivating force of the war, as well as the war’s isolating and demoralizing effect on its witnesses, are better achieved in The Forever War. Contrary to the sole perspective of an American Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) team in The Hurt Locker, Filkins includes multiple angles to explore each of the elements portrayed, and ultimately offers a more profound, subtle, and enduring explication than the film.
The book The Journal Of Biddy Owens by Walter Dean Myers Is a fantastic book! It took place in 1948. About a 16 year old Boy. In my opinion. It's a fast paced book, it's short, and it's about baseball. It's fast paced because their isn't a lot of words to read. Also it's got over 100 pages, so then it would count as a book we would have to read for the quarter.
The author, Sean Gregory, in “The Perilous Fight,” talks about the political issue that has been going on for the past year, the issue started when a professional football player from the San Francisco 49ers team, also known as Colin Kaepernick, kneeled down when the National anthem for the United States of America was played at the beginning of a game. Kaepernick’s justification for this, was that this was his way of protesting unfair treatment of individuals because of racial characteristics. Since racism, discrimination, and gender inequalities have been going on for centuries, I agree on the matter of sports players being able to kneel down when the anthem, “Star spangled Banner,” is being played because these people are trying to stand up for what they believe is right, and they should be allowed to protest because it is serving as a peaceful way to protest for people who are being unjustly treated. Racism and discrimination often leads to these individuals who are suffering to be judged, killed, and many other harsh things that should not be taking place in the “land of the free.” We as Americans are given so many great things, and people think about the United States they usually think of freedom, pursuit of happiness, and the rights of being a U.S. citizen, but how can we exercise those given rights properly, when t the government does not let us by putting limitations and restrictions on how we use our rights? When it's
Backfield Boys is the kind of book that I really wanted to like. The subject matter could not be more timely, as it is about a pair of athletes, two football players, a wide receiver and a quarterback, who are introduced in the opening chapter, and one is black and one is white. The twist is that the wide receiver is white and the quarterback is black. Tom Jefferson and Jason “White Lightning” Roddin make for an interesting pair and compound this subversion of expectations with the fact that Jason is Jewish, and the controversy surrounding Colin Kaepernick, this book by sportswriter John Feinstein clearly feels like a timely piece of entertainment in the Trump era.
I really enjoyed this book because of how they are the underdogs. They don't have enough money, players, and a good field to play. As a sports fan, I always want the underdog team to win. It is just a good feeling when a team that was expected to lose, comes out victorious.
In Supreme Conflict, Jan Crawford Greenburg provides insightful analysis and assessment of the politics surrounding the Supreme Court appointment process of Justices during the Rehnquist Court. Despite having seven conservative nominees the Rehnquist Court was deeply disappointing to those conservatives hoping to reverse decades of progressive rulings on key social issues. Throughout the book Greenburg describes both positive and negative appointments and nominations such as Anthony Kennedy Clarence Thomas, and David Souter. Greenburg also includes some background on the impact the Warren and Berger Courts had on the Rehnquist and later Roberts Courts.
“Victors and Vanquished,” through excerpts of Bernal Diaz del Castillo The True History of the Conquest of New Spain and indigenous testimonies from the Florentine Codex, represents the clash between European and indigenous cultures and how there was no simple “European” or “indigenous” view. Rather, there were a variety of European and indigenous opinions and interpretations that were influenced by personal interests, social hierarchy and classes, ethnic biases and political considerations.
The novel begins with preseason football in the heat of a Texas summer. The players and coaches practice over 4 hours a day in 100-degree weather. The media is affecting every player pushing for a state championship and college scouts at every practice. The boys who gave completely of themselves for their sport are unique personalities. From dedicated quarterback Mike Winchell to Harvard-bound Brian Chavez to the inscrutable Ivory Christian, the team was full of young men who were singular human beings, each one bringing something special and indefinable to their group. And that's just scratching the very surface.The book recounts the tragic story of Boobie Miles, team’s star running back who had been highly recruited by all of the major programs. He is expected to attend and earn a scholarship to a large state college. The community
All stories have at least one of three different kinds of conflict, man versus man, man versus nature, and man versus himself. Some stories, like Richard Connell's “"The Most Dangerous Game"”, use all three conflicts uniquely and clearly. When each conflict is put to a test of strength in the story, man vs man is the strongest. The weakest is man vs himself. And the final conflict is man vs nature. The three conflicts are used evenly so they end up being as significant as each other.
In the story The Last Duel by Eric Jager, fourteenth century in medieval France, a knight by the name of Jean de Carrouges challenges a squire, Jacques Le Gris, to a duel. The reason for this trial by combat, a court-ordered duel intended by fate of God to determine the truth, was to seek vengeance for the sake of his own honor. The wife of Jean Carrouges was the "young, beautiful, good, sensible, and modest" Marguerite. She was expected to maintain a ladylike mannerism and remain loyal to her husband. When the couple traveled to Capomensil to visit Carrouges mother-in-law Marguerite stayed under her watch while Carrouges set out on a journey in desperate need of cash. While away on his journey
There are roughly 800,000 people living within the United States that is under the protection of an executive order during the Obama administration called Deferred Action Against Childhood Arrivals, or DACA. These children, commonly referred to as “Dreamers,” have grown up in the United States. They attended elementary school here, many graduated high school here, and many went on to become successful adults living in the United States, but as of September 5th, 2017 the DACA program was shut down by the Trump administration, pending a trial in Congress. This means that those hundreds of thousands of individuals living under the DACA arm will no longer be legal residents in the United States.
I chose the book The Hunger Games. It is based on competitions between 12 districts. One boy and One girl from each district either volunteers or gets drawn out of the box. The story begins on the reaping in District 12. Katniss Everdeen is a 16 year old . She met her friend Gale. They hunting before the reaping begun that afternoon. Prim who is 4 years younger than Katniss, and her mother, who both have depended on Katniss .Katniss father died in a when she was 11years old. The reaping is choses a boy and a girl, ages from 12 to 18, they will serve as tributes in the Games. 2 people are drawn out in each of the 12 districts, and they are sent where they fight. Only one person survives.The Games are controlled by the Capitol, and punish
This novel develops characters that engage in sex, to teachers cheating so their high school football players can continue to participate on the football field. Many people have a major affect on football and society in this novel. One of the major characters was Boobie Myles. Boobie was supposed to be the star athlete on the Permian football team. In the beginning, Boobie was arrogant to his teammates and wasn’t a good team leader. All Boobie cared about was winning and getting to the next level of football to satisfy his athletic needs. When Boobie is injured, he realizes he took football for granted and would do anything to play again. The team needs Boobie and Boobie needs the team. Coach Gaines realizes Boobie was seriously hurt and gives an inspiring pep talk to the team about how the players need to put their heart in the game and how lucky they are to be playing for Odessa.
Gwendolyn Brooks' "First fight. Then Fiddle." initially seems to argue for the necessity of brutal war in order to create a space for the pursuit of beautiful art. The poem is more complex, however, because it also implies both that war cannot protect art and that art should not justify war. Yet if Brooks seems, paradoxically, to argue against art within a work of art, she does so in order create an artwork that by its very recognition of art's costs would justify itself.
I know a lady Sandy when she was seventeen years old she gave birth to a baby girl name Clarissa. Clarissa was born mid- July and she was pretty as she could be. She had curly hair, nice big brown pupils and the cutest little fat cheeks her mother had ever seen. Her and her mother struggled for a while hoping that things would get better. Her mother gave birth to her in a town that she was not from but shortly after birth they returned back to their home town. When she arrived she did not have a place for her and her baby to live so Sandy’s sister let them move in with her. Her and her sister could not get along they fault constantly, they were living in their grandfather house so her sister moved out and Sandy kept the house.