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Seven Simple Tips on Book Collecting for the Novice
by Nicholl McGuire, May 28, 2008
With so many books out there, how do you know which one is worth keeping? You don’t unless you have a general understanding of what a collector might be looking for if he or she should stumble across your old books.
Comments(0)   Liked It: 2
Comparison of the Sexes Through the Involvement of the Narrator
by Jonathan Hudson, May 30, 2008
Comparing Maxine Hong-Kingston's novels China Men and The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts. Looking at the way Hong-Kingston draws comparisons between the two sexes through her use of different narration.
Comments(0)   Liked It: 1
Analysis of Two Soldiers: William Faulkner and the Trouble J.F. Powers Through the Critical Lens
by Alex Donnelly, May 25, 2008
Two Soldiers by William Faulkner and the Trouble by J.F. Powers analyzed through the critical lens of irony and indirect characterization.
Comments(0)   Liked It: 1
Analysis of the Lord of the Flies with Sigmund Freud's Ideas
by Alex Donnelly, May 25, 2008
The Lord of the Flies through the Freudian lenses.
Comments(0)   Liked It: 6
New Aspiring Lawyers Often Look to Atticus Finch as a Model for Being a Hero
by Alex Donnelly, May 25, 2008
John Jay Osborn Jr. and Monroe Freedman deny this, feeling that Atticus does nothing deserving of hero status being that he does not stand up against, and accepts racism. In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird , by Harper Lee, Atticus proves to be a hero. While he does not outright denounce racism, he takes crucial steps towards racial tolerance by defending Tom Robinson.
Comments(2)   Liked It: 1
How the Invisible Man by H.G. Wells Relates to Capitalism
by Alex Donnelly, May 25, 2008
H.G. wells used the Invisible Man to critique Capitalism.
Comments(0)   Liked It: 1
Inner Strength is the Key
by Blaaaaaaah, May 20, 2008
Regardless of what others think, one should continue to push on and endure all obstacles life throws at one.
Comments(0)   Liked It: 0
Sentimentalism in Huckleberry Finn
by megan falley, May 22, 2008
Do you think that the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is the best realistic piece of literature in the cannon? Read on as I prove it to be one of the most sentimental pieces of literature of our time, an accusation even Mark Twain would be surprised by.
Comments(0)   Liked It: 0
Everything's Eventual
by Nelson Tan, May 21, 2008
14 Tales from the Master of Horror, Stephen King.
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Lord of the Rings
by munim, May 21, 2008
“The lord of the rings” is erroneously called a trilogy. It's actually 1 novel divided into 3 parts, each part is divided into 2 books, so there are 6 books and not 3 .
Comments(0)   Liked It: 9
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