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The Process Of Memory In The Giver By Lois Lowry

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Memory. This is known as the process of remembering. But, what if we could not remember? What if we lived every day like a brand new life? It would be great right? Not so much. Memories are important. Lois Lowry teaches this in the book The Giver. She shows us what life is like without pain or pleasure, what it would be like with no memories, and no relationships with humans. The most crucial component of life is memory. Without memories, we would live a mundane life which has no purpose. The Giver was written by the one and only Lois Lowry. Lowry was born on March 20, 1937, in Honolulu, Hawaii. She was a quiet girl who loved to read. Biography.com states, “She was around 8 or 9 years old when she decided she wanted to be a writer.” (Biography.com) Lowry is known as one of the best authors of children’s books. Her father was a dentist and was in the army. This caused Lowry’s family to move around many times. She graduated from a New York City high school, then attended Brown University. She dropped out after two years to get married. When she was 19, she married Donald Lowry. She wrote many great books including The Giver, Anastasia Krupnik, and Son. Lois Lowry wrote this book in a difficult time of her life. Her inspiration for The Giver was her father. Her father was put into a nursing home because he could not take care of himself, and he started to lose his memories. Lowry decided she was going to create a society where there were no memories or feeling. In an

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