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Category: Literature

Into the Woods (Play): Summary & Critique

Posted on September 19, 2020September 19, 2020 by JL Admin

The core idea of the play is its idea of bringing various fairy tale characters together. It is a mark of the fertile imagination of writer Stephen Sondheim that classic fairy heroes such as Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, Rapunzel etc, are brought under one grand narrative. While retaining their original features that these characters are…

Dune by Frank Herbert: Summary

Posted on May 4, 2020May 4, 2020 by JL Admin

The text of Dune is divided into three books of unnumbered chapters. Each chapter is headed by an epigraph that is a quotation, not from an existing literary work but from a pseudo-scholarly work attributed to Princess Irulan, whom the reader learns only at the very end of the novel becomes Paul’s wife. The various…

Cold Sassy Tree – Analysis – Essay

Posted on May 3, 2020May 3, 2020 by JL Admin

Within the broad category of novels, critics and literary historians identify numerous types, each with its own conventions and each arousing certain expectations in the reader. While readers are usually told that they cannot judge a book by its cover, the fact is that readers begin to make judgments about books on the basis of…

Cold Sassy Tree: Setting

Posted on May 3, 2020May 3, 2020 by JL Admin

Cold Sassy Tree is one of many works—novels, short stories, and plays—that examine smalltown life in the American South, particularly during the early years of the twentieth century. Chief among American writers who chronicled small-town life was William Faulkner, who created a fictional county in Mississippi that he used in many of his novels and…

Cold Sassy Tree: Symbols, Dialect & Point of View

Posted on May 2, 2020May 2, 2020 by JL Admin

Symbols Symbolism, a device in which something concrete represents something abstract, can be used in fiction in at least two different ways. Sometimes symbolism occurs in the form of symbolic objects. The symbolism of these objects can be universal, but often it is contextual, meaning that the symbolism derives from how the object is framed…

Cold Sassy Tree: Themes

Posted on May 2, 2020May 2, 2020 by JL Admin

Death  Death plays a prominent role in Cold Sassy Tree. Before the action of the novel begins, Rucker and Will are faced with the death of Mattie Lou, Rucker’s wife. Will himself has a near-death experience when he is caught on a train trestle and the train passes over him as he lies between the…

Cold Sassy Tree: Characters

Posted on May 1, 2020May 1, 2020 by JL Admin

Mattie Lou Blakeslee  Mattie Lou is Will Tweedy’s grandmother and the wife of Rucker Blakeslee. She dies before the novel’s action begins and does not appear directly in the story. She was a good wife to Rucker and earned the respect of the town for her kindness. She was an avid gardener and loved her…

Cold Sassy Tree: Chapter Summaries

Posted on May 1, 2020May 1, 2020 by JL Admin

Chapters 1–4  In 1914, the novel’s narrator, Will Tweedy, recalls events in Cold Sassy, Georgia, that took place primarily in the summer of 1906, when he was fourteen years old. On the night of July 5 that year, Will’s grandfather, Rucker Blakeslee, arrives at Will’s home to have a drink of corn whiskey; Rucker’s wife,…

The Bonesetter’s Daughter: Analysis

Posted on April 30, 2020April 30, 2020 by JL Admin

Two writers fill the pages of Amy Tan’s latest novel, The Bonesetter’s Daughter. The first and most talented is LuLing, an 82-year-old Chinese woman who, in a tragically beautiful narrative, tells the story of her life before she emigrated to the United States following World War Two. At the heart of her story is Precious…

The Bonesetter’s Daughter: Setting

Posted on April 30, 2020April 30, 2020 by JL Admin

Peking Man  Peking Man is an assemblage of Homo erectus fossilized bones found on Dragon Bone Hill, amidst the Zhoudoukian cave systems, thirty miles (fifty kilometers) southwest of Peking, China, from 1921 to 1936. Dragon Bone Hill was called such because local people knew it as a place to find the fossils they called dragon…

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