Sunday, February 13, 2011

Louisiana: A Place I'd Like to Visit

Austin                                                                                                                             February 13, 2011
Mrs. Zurkowski                                                                                                                               Purples
Louisiana

             There are a lot of places I have never been to and a lot of those places I wish to visit. One of those places is Louisiana. This state in the U.S. actually began as a part of France and was purchased after the Revolution against Britan. It has a unique culture of mixed American, Cajun, French, Spanish, and Creole people. The state is known for several things including Jazz, voodoo, seafood, and its cultured background (for instance the word "Bayou"). The climate is subtropical with long, humid summers and breif mild winters. I would like to visit it to enchance my knowledge of both the state and its many interesting attractions. If I went, I would probably travel by plane and pack my camera, clothes, money, sketchbook, notebook, laptop, cell phone, brochures, several books on the area, and of course my return ticket. I would like to go with someone, because having someone with you helps enchance the  experience and it wouldn't hurt to have good company. I might pack a French dictionary, seeing as how influential the language was in the past (today most of the state's residents speak English; around 90%) . Below are some images of the state and items of interest there.




Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Short Biography of Jon Krakauer

Austin        
Purples                                                                      
Mrs. Zurkowski
February 8th, 2011
The Life of Jon Krakauer (In a Nutshell)

           Jon Krakauer was born on April 12, 1954 in the state of Massachusetts. However, he was raised in Oregon from the age of two. Krakauer started mountain climbing when he was eight and graduated high school in 1972. In 1977, he fell in love with Linda Moore and they were married by 1980. The couple lived in Washingto but moved to Colorado after the release of his book Into Thin Air. In the year 1996, Krakauer published Into the Wild (not very creative with book titles is he?) which I explained earlier in the blog. Also noted is the fact Krakauer tends to draw similiraties between himself and the subject of his book. Some other important works of literature of his include Under the Banner of Heaven and Where Men Win Glory: The Odyssey of Pat Tillman.

SOURCE: WIKIPEDIA and INFO TRAC

Picture of Jon Krakauer, Author of Into the Wild

                                          
Image courtesy of http://www.newnewjournalism.com/bio.php?last_name=krakauer

Monday, February 7, 2011

Into The Wild - English Project

Austin                                                                                                                               February 7, 2011
Mrs. Zurkowski                                                                                                                               Purples
Book Summary Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer

               Jon Krakauer's novel Into The Wild is a true story about the life of Christopher McCandless. The book went on to become a movie directed by Sean Penn. The main topic covered in the book was the span of time between 1990 and 1992, when McCandless got rid of all his possesions and took a trek across the wilderness of North America. The book starts at the site of McCandless' death in Alaska and then retraces his two year journey from that point. You other teenagers out there should read this book! I have not read the book myself (all the above info was from Wikipedia or my teachers), but from what I am hearing it is a good one to digest. Below is a picture of the book.

                                                

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Character Sketch Essay

Austin S.                                                                                                                            1/13/2011
Mrs. Zurkowski                                                                                                                       Purples
Character Sketch: Lemorel Milderellen
“Souls in the Great Machine” by Sean McMullen

Lemorel has always been unlucky in love.  In Sean McMullen’s novel, “Souls in the Great Machine”, Lemorel is one of many main characters living during the aftermath of a great apocalypse few humans survived in the far future.  Her past is revealed piece by piece in the book, and is revealed in an almost cloak and dagger fashion. At the start of the story, the reader knows Lemorel has been driven by love to do terrible things in her past and now is trying to run away to a new life.  She starts out well and even becomes the personal advisor to one of the leaders of the country she lives in. However as the story continues, her past comes back to haunt her and she is greatly affected by it.  She changes for the worse and since Lemorel starts out as already being a close companion to one of the most powerful people in the known world, her actions have a great impact.  The storyline for the book actually is based off a lot of the effects of Lemorel’s actions.  But to better understand Lemorel’s actions, it is important to know her reasons, history, and personality.
Lemorel is a young girl in her mid-twenties who has been hurt badly in her past.  As a result, Lemorel is a lonely person who is continually beating herself up or feeling depressed and angry.  She tries to hide from this and even starts a new life, using her great skill as a scholar to advance herself farther and farther into higher social circles.  But occupying herself with work doesn’t work forever and she eventually falls for a new person.  Sadly, this new romance does not last long and Lemorel becomes angry.  As a person in a position of power she tries to finish him, but she fails.  Because of his mathematics skill, her false lover (John Glasken) has come to the attention of people even more influential than her and they take him away to work for them, leaving Lemorel fuming.  Her anger and a need for revenge is all that drive her towards the end of the book, and she betrays her country and leads a war to try and strike back at all the ones who have ever hurt her.  
There have been many people who have hurt Lemorel in her past and many situations where she has been put down.  The first terrible event that happened to her occurred when she was much younger. She had her first lover, but he was more of a poetic man who could not satisfy her lust. One day she was walking home when one of the men from the village seduced her. Her lover found out and committed suicide. Then she challenged her seducer to a duel, who she thought was the cause of all the trouble. When she killed him, others retaliated and Lemorel went on a legal vendetta against her prosecutors. In the course of it, she killed nine men and one woman. Lemorel had felt betrayed, sad, hurt, and angry. She took her revenge and then covered her actions under the mask of the law.
Another event that happened in the event that changed her was when Lemorel met a new lover and trusted him. Their first encounter was from Pg. 77-80, where John Glasken, helps to defend her against two assassins meant to attack her companion. After fending the men off and the authorities arrived, Glasken starts to reel Lemorel in. For instance as soon as they leave the alley, Glasken re-introduces himself and acts like a gentleman, saying “I am honored, Frelle, and charmed besides…” She falls for him, feeling relieved and joyful thinking that she had finally found the right one. She was distraught when she found out he was just using her on Pgs. 114-117, and she was bent on making him suffer.
This is the part in the story where Lemorel changes the most. When her superiors move Glasken out of her grasp, she becomes enraged and tries to get him back but is unsuccessful. This was the last straw for Lemorel and she snapped. She left her home country to help rebels in the southern provinces strike back at her country, using her tactical skills to become their army commander. For instance, she took out several senior officers who opposed her methods and this is mentioned on Pg. 409 that “…She was said to be fond of personally executing senior officers who failed her…” She burned four major cities in her conquest and nearly captured the capital of her homeland. Lemorel felt that by destroying her home country, she was destroying her past and was symbolically striking back at everyone who had ever hurt her.
In the end, Lemorel is merely someone who was driven mad by love, who helped set the storyline in motion for the rest of Sean’s book, the “Souls in the Great Machine”. The author uses her to show that love is a powerful force and can make, or break, a person. The character seems to leave the impression that people should watch their step and know what they are getting into.