Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Ashes of August

ashes of august is a great story, and i really enjoyed the way she wrote it. The things that resonated with me most were the opening scene and the part where the man shot himself because of the pressure.

The ending was also incredibly suspensful, and the way she wrote it was jsut fantatsic.

I would write more, but i'm incredibly tired!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

reading for october 13th

Both of the stories we had to read were good (Fittings and My Father Always Says), and I was touched by both of them. I like My Father Always Says because the author learns about her heritage and sees a change in her father after visiting their homeland, and I thought that his new favorite saying was the best of all.

Fittings was my favorite, just because I loved the character that was the old woman. I thought she was charming, and Alzhiemers always strikes a sad key with me, because i've had two relatives I know that have Alzheimers. I thought the story was charming in general, and I liked it a lot.

They were both very good, and I enjoyed reading them.

now, off to bed!

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Hostess Cake...just with meat and egg

This story, along with the Alaska story, both hit me fairly hard. However, this one made more of an impact with me. In Alaska, her heritage isn't set in stone. She basically has no power in her heritage, and is made fun of for basically being a mutt. Both spanish and indian, she is ridiculed by racist fools. She is confused by their remarks, and she doesn't know what to make of getting a shotgun placed in her face. the difference between the stories is their dedication to their heritage.

In Dumpling, Balcita has a rich history that she first ignores. She is taught about her heritage through cooking, but at the moment, suntanning and hanging out with her friends is better than just lame old cooking. However, she takes more interest as it goes along, and she starts to examine her mother more of as an angel than anything (although she calls her a witch instead. which made me laugh), and the art of cooking becomes just that: a skill she wants. After perfecting her dumpling making skill, she takes it to school, and is insulted because of it.

this is the part of the story that struck me - she turns her back on her culture because of her embarassment, something that just shows how children struggle with fitting in.

I love her last lines "They are green and sparkling. I think maybe I can stay out here and look at them forever, but then I remember that they'll be gone in a week." Which I take as how she dealt with the situation. It may seem as if the embarassment may last forever, but it will be gone in a week. I really liked this story. It was charming and sad. Truly a good piece.

blah

i feel so sick

i just got caught in the rain...

and now i feel sick


blah.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Independence Day

this piece was very good. Racism is something lots of people deal with day to day and it isn't any different in alaska. I like the ending a lot (i never wore that bandana or the jean jacket again) and I like when she tells the part about the owner ofthe bar getting shot, and how she was glad taht he was dead. It showed her humanity. It was a very good piece, and the entire manner of the piece shifted as the paper did, because from the beginning, she was a wistful 12 year old, who couldn't care less about important things, who live in a different world, who was forced into the world of maturity by a racist bar owner with a gun. its unfortunate, but worse has happened.

i really liked this story, and it was a good vignette.