John Knowles a Separate Peace Essay

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    his best friend, Finny. On the tree branch, Gene was considering jumping or not. Gene thinks to himself, “I did… I felt a flash of disbelief… but i always jumped, or else I would have lost face with Phineas, and that would have been unthinkable” (Knowles 34). Finny will always jump from the tree, so Gene feels like he needs to, too. The adventurous, carefree attitude that Finny has is what Gene wants as well. Gene feels that he has to convince himself and others that he can do everything Finny can

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    “It was surprisingly how well we got along in these two weeks. Sometimes I found it hard to remember his treachery, sometimes I discovered myself thoughtlessly slipping back into affection for him again. I remember when one summer day after another broke with a cool effulgence over us, and there was a breath of widening life in the next morning air- something hard to describe- an oxygen intoxicant. I forgot whom I hated and who hated me. I wanted to break out crying from stabs of hopeless joy, or

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    In A Separate Peace, Gene Forrester ended up learning a lot about himself during his time at Devon. He has made a couple of friends there, and has left a couple behind without noticing it. Gene learned about how one decision can affect how he feels about himself. For example, Gene decided to make his so called “best friend” (Finny) fall out of a tree. “Holding firmly to the trunk, I took a step toward him, and then my knees bent and I jounced the limb.” (Knowles 59-60) Gene made an impulsive action

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    Not everyone in this life can be the very best and express themselves to their full potential one hundred percent of the time; that is because no one is perfect. Everyone who has common sense in this world knows that we all make mistakes. Making mistakes is just one factor of beginning to grow up. I do think that more people need to take this to consideration that mistakes, or even doing something on purpose, is just a normal part of maturing. So, if you were to get into some really deep thought

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    Questioning one’s sexuality is often a stressful and unpleasant experience. Throughout the novel A Separate Peace, the complex relationship between Gene Forrester, an insecure and often belittled individual, and Phineas, a popular and athletic person, is fueled by Gene’s conflicts and confusions regarding his own sexuality. Without having an outlet to express his feelings or anyone to turn to for advice, Gene develops this type of twisted love for Finny. Gene’s conflict about his sexuality eventually

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    Denial of Truth in John Knowles' "A Separate Peace" The novel A Separate Peace focuses mainly around a 17 year old named Gene Forrester and his psychological development. The story is set in a boys boarding school in USA during World War II. There are four main boys in the novel and they all undergo major character changes through the story. One of them goes crazy, and the others experience severe attitude changes. Gene is caught right in the center of these changes. He is very close with all

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    Ever have the taste of multiple literary devices while reading? That is what this book does when you read it. A Separate Peace is a historical fiction novel written by John Knowles. It is about a boy who finds out he is jealous of his best friend and has to find peace within himself after losing his best friend. The passages that stand out in the novel, A Separate Peace, reveals the author’s use of suspense, imagery, and mood. The first literary device used is suspense. The first scene to have

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    ignorance; that imitation is suicide…” (Emerson, 370-372). John Knowles progressed a novel, A Separate Peace with a focus around two young boys that enrolled in a boarding school during the 1940s when World War II was occurring. One of the two boys, Gene, his personality traits and behavior could be described as both conformity. A Separate Peace provides the integrity of how Gene’s envy and imitation of himself, Finny, and if he found his peace when returning to Devon 15 years later. Gene’s envy and

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    the military to fight for their country. This is exemplified through the lives of Gene and Phineas, or Finny, as they cherish their remaining youth at the Devon School in rural New Hampshire before their enlistment in the war. In A Separate Peace, written by John Knowles, Gene and Finny are best friends, though their relationship transforms through phases of jealousy, envy, and warfare while there remains a longing for true identity. There is a sense of mutualistic loyalty between Gene and Finny,

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    a book because it is easy for the audience to relate. In both Of Mice and Men and A Separate Peace the central focus is a pair of unalike best friends. There is Gene and Phineas, also known as Finny, who are complete opposite roommates at Devon School. Lennie and George are two men who travel from ranch to ranch together, Finny often causes trouble and he relies on George to get him out. John Knowles and John Steinbeck depict similarities between Gene and Finny’s friendship and George and Lennie’s

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