Wednesday, May 20, 2015


Post 5- Truth in a Memoir 

I would say a book has to be about 99% true in order to be considered non-fiction. It has to have all the facts right/true, the story line isn’t even bended a little, all true, otherwise it would be a lie and just some made up story considering it to be fiction instead. It’s okay though to change small detail, just not facts or storyline. For example a person in the story is wearing a red shirt, but you decide to change it to blue, just small unnecessary detail.
Half-truths are not okay, even if it’s a good story, you’d be lying to your readers, and it wouldn’t be a memoir anymore just a plain out fiction story that has some true facts to it.

David Shields is right, we do need lines between genres. It separates nonfiction and fiction, without it we wouldn’t know what the truth is or if it’s just a story.   

Final Exam

Blog Post- Final Exam
Book 4
Emma Simendinger

In “The Room” by Emma Donoghue, it’s the story a young boy and his Ma, living behind the walls of “Room.” Never coming out and revealing Ma’s real name, she was kidnapped at age 19 and forced to live in a small shed, till twenty-seven years old. Jack, Ma’s son is the narrator of the story, it all being seen through a five year old’s eyes. The innocence of Jack and thinking everything good about room, or for him even seeing Old Nick as being the good guy who cares for them, not as the guy who stole Ma. To Jack, the only things in room that are real is room itself and everything in room. So trees, toys, stores are all fake in his mind.  Although it being a fictional story, it’s a realistic story of something that could happen or in this case a similar story that actually has happened. In the nonfiction piece, a memoir by Jaycee Dugard, “A Stolen Life.” The real experience of, Jaycee at the age of 11 was taken, and survived for 18 years living in the backyard of her kidnappers home, living inside a tent. Where Jaycee became a mother to two daughters in her stolen years. “The Room” is a similar story in the fact both girls were held captive in backyards of the home of their kidnappers, both women being taken on their way to school/class, getting pregnant and raising the children in their small living spaces, and finally getting out many years later.

                
These two books were both very enjoyable books. Barely could ever set the book down. The book gave you emotions to experience while reading. Such very similar stories, one being real and the other just fiction, but they both send a message out of realistic events that could happen, an just a sad story being told. “A Stolen Life” actually being the first book to make me cry, after knowing the characters in the book and even feeling trapped yourself as a reader the way she is, and it’s just a surreal reading.  

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Book 3 Listicle

Book 3 Listicle
5 Reasons Every Love Story is the Same.
Emma Simendinger

The book “What Happened to Goodbye” by author, Sarah Dessen writes yet another love story about a teenage girl, Mclean Sweet and her struggles of moving around a lot. Mclean’s parents becoming divorced and shutting down the family restaurant because of the “incident” where she loses the close relationship with her mom, and in the process of it all even loses herself, she even falls in love, and blah-blah-blah, like every romance story ever, it’s the exact same.

1.) She has a secret dark past
You always have that girl, that mysterious girl, which you just can’t seem to get through.
Mclean comes to a new school, is a gorgeous girl, people notice her, but the new attractive girl has a secret past standing in the way of any new friends. Her past life, with her parents, the family restaurant they owned, all of it gone, but why? “But in the real world, you couldn’t really just split a family down the middle, mom on one side, dad the other, with the child equally divided between. It was like when you ripped a piece of paper into two: no matter how you tried, the seams never fit exactly right again. It was what you couldn't see, those tiniest of pieces, which were lost in the severing, and their absence kept everything from being complete.” (Dessen) The fact that we got some information into her past, but stops there leaving us to figure out the rest, along with every other character in the book.

2.) She hides her true identity
                Mr. Sweet’s job in the food industry and the constant moving from town to town, it’s a perfect setting to set up a new girl to be every time they move. Whether she has invented herself into being Liza, Eliza, or Beth, at her new school she ends up going by her real name Mclean. All her past fake names and people, was her cover up to what her life use to be and why she doesn’t want to be the old girl she once was.  “All those clean, fresh starts had made me forget what it was like, until now, to be messy and honest and out of control. To be real.” (Dessen) She liked all the fresh starts, the reinventing every time she had her “fresh start” but the real her came out.

3.) The boy next store
                There isn’t a love story without the charming boy, with the golden looks and personality that sweeps you away. It just wouldn’t be natural without it. Dave Wade the neighbor boy, instantly crushes on Mclean when they meet while running from the cops after a huge party was being busted. The outgoing person he is keeps going for Mclean trying to figure her out, and what girl is she really. The back and forth flirting, then at the very end finally they confess their feelings. “You asked me to go out with you. I know you probably changed your mind. But you should know, the answer was yes. It's always been yes when it comes to you.” (Dessen) Mclean at this point in the book, when she says this line, finally comes to realization what she wants and confesses.

4.) He’s figured out the girl
                After Dave chases the girl he wants, trying to figure out why she is so mysterious, he finally gets the answers he wants. Slowly being let into Mclean’s guarded life and her huge past secret, and the reason for her parents’ divorce. “Odd how it was so easy for a stranger to assume such familiarity. Especially when those who were supposed to know you best often didn't, not at all.” (Dessen) He automatically understood her and continued to figure her out.

5.) The cliché ending
                So after getting past all the conflicts, like the typical downfall that causes the two lovers to break apart but they always come back together and forgive each other for some stupid fight or mistake they made. But of course it’s not till the very ending of the book they actually have the big moment of the confessing their feelings. Then from there it’s a happily ever after…“Once you love something, you always love it in some way. You have to. It’s, like, a part of you for good.” (Dessen) The cliché fight break up, not lasting forever but being fixed at the end. Every love story ends that way! Every single one.