1. What is weird about the sea near the Institute?
It is enchanted.
2. Who is Mark?
Julian’s brother.
3. Why is Mark special?
Because he is a faerie.
4. What do the faeries want to know really bad?
Who is murdering their kind.
5. The faeries need help. Who do they turn to?
They ask the Shadowhunters for help.
6. What is weird about the world of faeries?
The time works differently there. 7. What is the only rule parabatais must follow?
They can never fall in love.
8. Where do vampires party?
On the Sunset Strip.
9. Why is Emma so involved in this alliance with the faeries?
Because she wants revenge for her parents’ death.
10. Why is Julian so involved in the alliance with the faeries?
Because he wants revenge for his brother who
His impulsive actions makes his character, not only revengeful, but also demonic. His goal in life was to take revenge on those who have victimized him.
He wanted to get vengeance for the FBI/ATF’s firebombing of a ranch in Waco, Texas, that killed 79 civilians.
He is living for revenge. Westley has suffered a whole lot because of this man, and he wants to get even.
Mark explained that both of them were friends who were inseparable. He stated, “ I lost both my friend and my privileges to experience the world.” The two teens were students at Waverly High School. Carl Stringfield, who is the principle of Waverly High School stated, “ These gentlemen were very outstanding both educational and athletic.”
to hate his father because he blames him for having been his son, and that is why he is in
because he is so much smaller than his father, but he also looks up to
He didn't do that out of hate or spite, but out of the fact that he thought his brother could keep up with
When the two brothers left town with their truck pickup what the cop dint realize is that the two brothers were drunk and were even carrying with them wine which they continued drinking as they drove off. Their judgment was impaired and because the cop was still following them so he may arrest them and humiliate them further therefore it’s the same reason the brothers decided to revenge or even do anything that would possibly retaliate since they had nothing else left for them to evade arrest.
As in many other dysfunctional households, he grew up in an abusive environment. At a very young age we learned that Mark was a institutionalized and labeled as a criminal, based off his many arrest while in his adolescent years. His mother ,Sandra, was a drug addict so after his birth he was left to live with their grandparents. After his mother returned to be with Mark's father ,Wallace, (which we later learn wasn't his real father), Mark endured constant mental and physical abuse from his parents. Tena Stroman, Mark's aunt, later testified that “She had heard Wallace calling Mark “stupid, “ignorant,” “dumb,” and “worthless.” She claimed that Wallace kicked Mark in the head and thumped him in the ear and forehead.” (84) Growing up in this type atmosphere caused him to make horrible decisions as child, which transitioned into his
The reason is because it says,”His father always told him to act like a man”(Park,11). So he wants the group not look at him in a bad way saying he’ll just slow us down. It shows self-motivation because he is able to try to go to the group without being scared the rebels will hurt them. The second way he uses his survival factors is by using his Uncle to survive because when he finds his Uncle he is always saying saying, “Do you see that group of bushes?”
He is acting this way because he has lost his brother that he had a special connection with and does not want to grow up from that time. Unlike in the last quote, the next quote tells about how one is unable to commit to an adult activity because one is unable to move on and grow up.
"At school, I kept to myself, glowered in the hallways, and, with the right kind of provocation, punched people in the face." Mark is expected to feel a certain way about being Jewish, but that label means something different for him then it means for his parents. Such as when his family is leaving his grandparents in Vienna at the beginning of the story, his grandfather refuses to go chasing them around the globe. His reasoning being
Emma Woodhouse, who begins the novel "handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and a happy disposition" (Austen 1), suffers from a dangerous propensity to play matchmaker, diving into other’s lives, for what she believes is their own good. Despite this, she is a sympathetic character. Her matchmaking leads only to near-disasters and her expressions of remorse following these mistakes are sincere and resolute. Jane Austen's Emma concerns the social milieu of a sympathetic, but flawed young woman whose self-delusion regarding her flaws is gradually erased through a series of comic and ironic events.
resentful of him. They not only beat him, but try to force him to fight other
This was the gist of his plan because he is able to get his revenge while being out of suspicious eyes. Being the unctuous person