On the wooden table in the middle of the kitchen sits my light-brown mug lined with a dark brown rim. The steam, flowing up and disappearing into the air feels warm against my hand. Take a deep breath. The aroma of the black tea fills my nostrils as I add the perfect amount of milk and one pack of Splenda. I take the mug with both hands and go into my room. On top of my bed lies a book open to the page I had just left it. Setting my mug down on the nightstand, I get on my bed and open the book and start reading. The marvellous thing about stories and books is the ability to travel to different places in this universe, fictional or not, without leaving the comfort of your bedroom. The musk of the brand-new or worn-out book is something I have come to enjoy. But in the action of reading, I love turning the page. The rough, sometimes soft, edge of the brittle page holds the secrets of the character on its face and hides many more behind it. What will happen next? What will this character do? Turn the page. Suddenly the secrets, thoughts, actions, pour out of the page and engulf your mind with feelings that only the reader of those words can feel. …show more content…
Each word, phrase, or story is as unique and different as the stars that litter the night sky. They all sparkle in their own way. They are born. They live. Then, they die. I’ve always been interested in learning about other people’s stories and experiences. When I analyse a literary piece, I try to find the hidden advice in their actions and apply it in my life. Using they same techniques when you learn and understand a book character’s feelings, actions, or thoughts, I am able to empathize with people. With the advice I gathered from my personal experiences and other people’s stores, I help people solve their personal issues or just listen to their story. Understanding and helping many people made me very interested in the complexity of one’s
To conclude, author’s inspire their audience through evoking empathy and compassion in them. This is important because it helps people understand more about the world and know when changes
In “How to Mark a Book”, Mortimer J. Adler delves into the importance of active reading. His purpose is to encourage an audience of readers to not be afraid to write in a book because “…the soul of a book can be separated from its body” (Adler 17). Meaning, a book is more than its physical being and deserves to be cherished for what is written inside of it.
Sometimes the book made me laugh and I cried a bit in the end. You defiantly get caught by the book, by ‘A’ and the fascinating life ‘A’ lives. You want to know what happens with the people you meet through the story. You easily feel like you’re apart of the story.
Books convey one’s life to another, to a point that it is perceived relatable. These pieces of literature pry open the tiniest crevices of your imagination. Technology has recently taken over the book world by storm, so it may seem from the general audience that books are not at its finest era. However, to a book enthusiast
A book is like a door, without stepping through the door, you will never know what's on the other side. It is a mystery that can only be unveiled if you open it and look through it. Dana Gioia wants us to take that mystery and open it up, as many young adults have lost interest in the action of reading itself.
I have never been as comfortable with people made of flesh and bone than I have been with those made of words. Whatever information I lose in the contours of the human face, I have no trouble locating in the unchanging, permanent text of a book. There is something about literature that felt safe to me; the worlds created within far more welcoming to little girls with problems fitting in than the one outside the pages. For this reason, fiction, from Harry Potter to The Book Thief, has remained my greatest passion ever since I learned to read.
The kitchen was quiet as he opened the door. Through the glass window near the sink, he could see the sun was just starting to rise from behind the once dark horizon. A rooster crowed from outside, signaling the start of the day. A fresh, cool breeze floated in through the open window. On the table was a very small dark wooden bed which had a small heart craved into the centerpiece. It also had a small white mattress, a red and blue sheets, and a beautiful down quilt.
The sun was kissing the horizon; the day was just beginning, and the sweet sounds of the birds morning sound had awakened me. I was sitting in the same spot I do day after day, happy and well rested. I awoke from my peaceful slumber with a large, clanging chime that echoed off the walls and the roof. The sounds of footsteps stomped down the stairs, and there, as always, was Todd. And as he always does, he shuffled his way to the kitchen and turned on the coffee. Finally, as the aroma of burnt coffee grounds filled the air, a new day had begun.
In other words, reading literature goes beyond just the words of the author. As readers, we become more aware of what the narrator and of what the characters might be feeling. There are feelings that form our underlying base of who we are and a lot of the times we avoid them because they’re a constant reminder of what’s real versus what we want to think is real. From time to time literature may make the readers thing of something personal that gives us a sense of reality. Through John Updike’s Rabbit Run, Vladimir Nabokov’s Pale Fire, Margaret Atwood’s Happy Endings, James Joyce’s Araby, Patrick White’s The Vivesector, and Jorge Luis Borges’ Pierre Menard, Author of the ‘Quixote’ readers come to find a sense of reality within the characters portrayed through these works.
“In the kitchen, he stirred the coals in the old Home Comfort wood range. The coffee in the black percolator on the side of the range was still hot. He had made it by lamplight before going out. He poured a mug of the strong brew and sipped it as he took a heavy cast iron skillet from a hook on the wall and placed it on the range top. He set the coffee down and dropped a tablespoon full of soft butter into the warming skillet and broke two eggs into it, lightly salted them and sipped his coffee until they began to whiten around the edge.”
“We lose ourselves in things we love. We find ourselves there, too.” said once by author Kristin Martz. If you’re ever in the library one afternoon, do you connect to the profiles in your book? You may not know it, but our lives are connected to what we read on the daily, in several different techniques as well. Myself, I feel my personality reflecting onto a story or text that I may be reading. Literature and life connect to each other through characterization , conflict, and narration because of relative personalities and characteristics between the reader and the character.
It is nice to take a seat, relax, and break open a book of yours to read. With nothing else in mind, you embark on an adventure as the words guide you through your journey. This is the idea a reader normally accompany the feeling of reading a book. For many other people, like me before, they find it dreadfully painful as for each page turned is like trying to get closer to escape from captivity. I am unsure when my hatred associated with literature started, maybe caused by the hauntingly boring books I was forced to read by my former teachers. However, as time goes by, my attitude towards books gradually lifted when I was unchained from my shackles and allowed the freedom to choose my books. It wasn't that the books were bad, well, maybe, but
In life, humans go through a cycle of transparency, a cycle in which we cannot escape. We are trapped as if we are flies caught in a spider’s web. Life is the cruelest game ever created. It is a game with the same ending every time. The ending of this game will always be death. The question remains of why we choose to accept this unbeatable game. However, just like every game, there is one abstract concept we learn that is worth every hardship we face. That concept is love. Love is the most powerful emotion humans can feel. Love is both a freedom and a restriction in our lives. People have several ideologies that help them overcome obstacles in their lives. Uniquely, writing is my love and scapegoat to overcome adversity in my life.
I love reading books and telling stories. I choose stories and books that I can relate to. When I feel a connection with the writer, I enjoy the book more. Using my experiences as a reader, I try to find ways to connect with my audience while writing and I found that story telling is the key to that connection. Storytelling is a great element to use when writing. It is not only a way to grab the audience’s attention; it is also a way to connect with them. I’m a great storyteller, because I always add my personal experiences to my writing and it helps me connect with my
The room is dark for there is no light shining through the window next to the drawer like any other day. A folded paper in the bucket is settled next the drawer, that always have been cleaned, but not this time when I looked. I can smell the fresh tea where it is sitting on top of the night stand. I am sitting in a chair next to my parent’s bed with my ill mother laying on top of her bed.