rows Navigate Study Guide Form and Content (Survey of Young Adult Fiction)

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "rows Navigate Study Guide Form and Content (Survey of Young Adult Fiction)"

Transcription

1 Search all of enotes Search rows Navigate Study Guide Form and Content (Survey of Young Adult Fiction) In the form of diary entries by Charlie Gordon, Flowers for Algernon tells an emotionally wrenching story and implies much about human nature, psychology, and values. Charlie, a thirty two year old with an intelligence quotient (IQ) of 68, is the first human subject of an experimental procedure to increase intelligence, funded by the Welberg Foundation and conducted at Beekman University (somewhere in New York City) by Professor Harold Nemur, psychiatrist and neurosurgeon Dr. Strauss, and Burt Selden, a graduate student in psychology. Charlie is suggested as a candidate by Alice Kinnian, his teacher at the Center for Retarded Adults at Beekman, because of his kind temperament and desire to learn. At the laboratory, Charlie meets Algernon, a white mouse that has undergone the procedure and that can beat Charlie at running mazes. At Dr. Strauss s suggestion, Charlie begins keeping what he calls progris riports ; their bad spelling and misunderstandings show Charlie s mentally handicapped state. After the surgery, Charlie s intelligence and memory both increase, which is conveyed by his writing: in better spelling, more elaborate sentences, expanded vocabulary, and intellectual references. The changes, however, bring problems and unhappiness as well as abilities and enjoyment. Charlie loves learning, and he happily reads (at greater and greater speeds) and discusses abstract ideas with Beekman students. He also realizes that the people around him make fun of him including Gimpy, Joe Carp, and Frank Reilly, his best friends at the bakery where he works and he begins to remember childhood traumas. Charlie catches Gimpy cheating the bakery; the men at the bakery protest the presence of the new Charlie, and he is fired. Even Fannie Birden, a kind coworker, declares that Charlie s change is against God s will. Charlie s intelligence soon reaches genius level (an IQ of 185), causing problems with Strauss, Nemur, and Kinnian. Charlie falls in love with Alice, but she knows that he will soon be too intelligent for her. Charlie thinks that Nemur treats him like a laboratory animal, and, when he surpasses Nemur in intelligence, both behave badly. Nemur is condescending, and Charlie has grown arrogant and unforgiving. When Charlie is taken to a psychological conference in Chicago, he flees with Algernon, returning to New York City but not to Beekman. There he begins a casual affair with his neighbor Fay Lillman, a painter whose trust and openness to life are needed by the nowcynical Charlie. Charlie remembers more about his childhood, including his mother s desire to make him normal and his parents arguments. He goes to the Bronx to see his father but leaves without identifying himself. When drinking with Fay, Charlie regresses to his preexperiment self.

2 Increasing evidence indicates that the procedure is temporary, leaving its subjects worse than before. Algernon grows irritable and forgetful, then alternately lethargic and violent. Charlie persuades the Welberg Foundation to put him on the project as a scientist, and his genius reveals a central error by Strauss and Nemur. In The Algernon Gordon Effect: A Study of Structure and Function of Increased Intelligence, Charlie proves that he too will regress. He visits the Warren State Home in Long Island, where he may have to be placed. Furiously working in his remaining time, Charlie moves into the laboratory; Fay resents this abandonment but soon finds a new boyfriend. Charlie is almost haunted by his old self, and he realizes that intelligence without the ability to give and receive affection cannot succeed. Algernon dies, and Charlie buries him. The last three months of entries document Charlie s regression, worsening in spelling and grammar. Charlie visits his mother and sister Norma while he can, shocked to find his mother senile and Norma a kind person, proud of Charlie. Alice returns to Charlie, stating that they are now again on the same level; they make love a mystery, more than sex and she stays until Charlie drives her away. In the end, Charlie is back working at the bakery, sexually adolescent again, barely able to read and write; he even shows up for his old adult reading class, to Alice Kinnian s distress. He seems to have regained his old sweetness while having learned some things about human nature. Flowers for Algernon The Plot (Critical Survey of Science Fiction and Fantasy) Flowers for Algernon unfolds in a series of diary entries. In the first, dated martch 3, Charlie describes himself as a thirty two year old man who works at a bakery and attends Miss Kinnians class at the beekmin colledge center for retarted adults. Ensuing entries chronicle Charlie s progress as the first human subjected to an intelligence boosting surgical procedure. Before the operation, Charlie undergoes a series of tests that measure his intelligence. In one, he tries in vain to pencil through a maze faster than Algernon can run it. Algernon is a laboratory mouse that already has undergone the surgical procedure. After the surgery, sleep learning accelerates Charlie s mental development. By the end of the month, he outraces Algernon. In early April, he comprehends a grammar book overnight and shows signs of increased self awareness, staying home from Donner s Bakery after realizing that he has long been victimized by coworker friends Joe Carp and Frank Reilly. Counseling Charlie is Dr. Jay Strauss, a neurosurgeon and psychiatrist who, with Professor Harold Nemur, is responsible for the experiment. Together with lab assistant Burt Selden and teacher Alice Kinnian, they guide Charlie as he begins a long delayed maturation

3 process. Two months after the operation, Charlie is able to converse intelligently with college students but is stymied in acting on his amorous feelings for Alice. Although she is attracted to him, both fear that they may jeopardize his development. As Charlie accumulates knowledge at a breathtaking rate, his illusions are shattered at a similar clip. He sees the fallibility of his mentors and realizes that their interest in him stems largely from selfishness. Charlie rebels at a scientific conference in Chicago, where he and Algernon are put on display. Freeing the mouse from its cage, Charlie takes his counterpart back to New York and moves into an apartment near Times Square. Independent after years of institutionalization, Charlie initiates a new phase of his education, entering into an affair with free spirited Fay Lillman and visiting his father, Matt, who fails to recognize him. Charlie also applies his brainpower to studying Algernon s regressive tendencies. Suspecting that he also may regress, Charlie visits the Warren State Home and Training School, where his doctors and family had arranged to send him if the experiment failed. In late August, Charlie concludes that the experiment s results are indeed temporary and potentially fatal. After Algernon dies on September 17, Charlie spares the mouse from laboratory incineration by burying its remains in his backyard. Mindful of his inevitable decline, Charlie visits his mother, Rose, and sister, Norma, both of whom he remembers as hostile. He finds that Rose has entered senility and Norma feels remorse over her past unkindness toward him. Charlie consummates his relationship with Alice on October 11. Though heartened by their shared love, ten days later he tells her to leave in a fit of anger over his deterioration. Having already lost his multilingual abilities, he rapidly loses his typing prowess and command of English. Isolating himself from the Beekman staff, he returns to Donner s Bakery, where newly sympathetic coworkers welcome him. In his last entry, dated nov 21, Charlie writes of his decision to go to Warren. Bidding farewell to Alice and the others at Beekman, he asks that the reader put some flowrs on Algernons grave in the bak yard. Flowers for Algernon Style and Technique (Comprehensive Guide to Short Stories, Critical Edition) Flowers for Algernon is a classic what if? story. Keyes explores the proposition, What if an operation could increase human intelligence? from the point of view of an experimental subject, using the intimacy of a diary to immerse readers in Charlie Gordon s reality. Keyes uses a bittersweet, but always respectful, humor to illuminate Charlie s

4 interpretations of events. For example, when one coworker accuses another of pulling a Charlie Gordon when he loses a package, Charlie reflects, I dont understand why he said that. I never lost any packiges. Charlie s spelling, grammar, and syntax mirror his changing intellectual and emotional states. His first progris riport on martch 5 establishes Charlie as uncomplicated, guileless, and eager to please. His elation as his intelligence grows is reflected in later entries when he uses punctuation marks with exuberant abandon. In the ensuing weeks, his writing becomes flawless, and his subject matter grows increasingly complex. As his intelligence declines, his grammar, spelling, and punctuation revert to substandard forms. Flowers for Algernon is a science fiction story because it is set in a future time and involves a speculative technology. Keyes needs no distant, alien civilization to expose the failings of contemporary human interactions. Instead, he probes the inadequacies of a society uncomfortable with human diversity through the eyes of an unforgettable character. Flowers for Algernon Historical Context Civil Rights in the 1960s The issue which lies at the heart of Flowers for Algernon is Charlie Gordon's struggle to be recognized and treated as a human being. Prior to his operation, he was regarded as somehow less than fully human because of his subnormal intelligence. After the operation, he is discriminated against in a different way, as ordinary people shun him and the scientists who raised his IQ treat him as little more than another laboratory specimen. It should come as no surprise that this story of a person who manages to be a member of two different minorities the mentally handicapped and the mentally superior should have appeared during a time of growing awareness of the problems and the rights of minority groups. The period from the first publication of Flowers for Algernon as a short story to its publication as a novel, the period from 1959 to 1966, saw the rise of the civil rights movement in the United States. Although most immediately and dramatically focused on the task of securing equal rights for African Americans, the civil rights movement was accompanied by increasing attention to the issue of fair and equal treatment for all. The 1964 Civil Rights (/homework help/how did civil rights movements 1960s 1970s im ) Bill prohibited racial discrimination; 1966, the year Flowers for Algernon was published, saw the founding of the National Organization for Women. The rights of the mentally handicapped were also addressed during this time: in 1962 the President's Panel on Mental Retardation was organized, leading in 1968 to the Declaration of the General and Specific Rights of the Mentally Retarded. By the 1970s, the term "retardation" was replaced with "developmental disability," and specific provisions for the protection of the mentally handicapped from violence and discrimination became law. Flowers for Algernon's message

5 of tolerance and understanding for the mentally handicapped reflects the social and political struggles of its day, and the years following the novel's publication saw many of these issues regarding developmental disability finally addressed in the legislature and the courts. Psychology and the Rise of Scientific Research In addition to the civil rights movement, the 1950s and 1960s also saw the rise of psychoanalysis as a generally accepted method of dealing with emotional disorders. The theories of Sigmund Freud which saw human motivation as stemming largely from unconscious desires which are often traceable to childhood experiences and which frequently center on sex, were particularly influential during this time. Freud's theories were so widely discussed that most people, even if they were not trained in psychoanalysis, probably had some familiarity with concepts such as repression, neurosis, and the unconscious. Accordingly, the novel's focus on psychological themes, especially Charlie's emotional problems stemming from the abuse he suffered from his mother, was immediately familiar to the readers of the 1960s. Also on the rise in the 1950s and 1960s was funding for scientific research. Locked in a Cold War with the Soviet Union and still remembering Nazi Germany's V 2 rockets and the terrifying success of the atomic bomb, the United States during this era spent an unprecedented amount of money on scientific research. Government organizations such as the National Science Foundation, as well as private foundations and corporations, poured millions of dollars into scientific research. This included "basic" research that would not necessarily yield immediate practical applications. With so much money available, competition for funding intensified and universities became increasingly focused on obtaining and keeping research funding. In Flowers for Algernon. Professor Nemur and Dr. Strauss's funding from the "Welburg Foundation," as well as the pressure Nemur feels to publish his results and secure his professional reputation, directly reflect this trend. Flowers for Algernon Setting The setting of Flowers for Algernon is New York City, with a brief episode in Chicago, in the present or near future. Although the physical landscape and cultural background is not a major part of the novel, critic Robert Scholes has noted that the very normality and nondistinctiveness of the setting makes the one "different" element of the novel the surgical procedure that raises Charlie's IQ all the more distinctive. And at one point in the novel, when Charlie has taken Algernon and is hiding out from the scientists, the crowded urban landscape of New York City becomes an important part of Charlie's attempts to come to terms with his situation: "on a hot night when everyone is out walking, or sitting in a theater, there is a rustling, and for a moment I brush against someone and sense the connection between the branch and trunk and the deep root."

6 Although originally published as a work of science fiction the short story won the World Science Fiction Convention's Hugo Award and the novel won the Nebula Award of the Science Fiction Writers of America "Flowers for Algernon" has achieved wide popularity outside the science fiction field. Much of the novel's power comes from Keyes's remarkable use of first person point of view, as Charlie's entries move from semi literacy to complex sophistication and back to semi literacy. At the heart of Flowers for Algernon is Charlie Gordon's struggle to be recognized and treated as a human being. Prior to his operation, he was regarded as somehow less than fully human because of his subnormal intelligence. After the operation, he is discriminated against in a different way, as ordinary people shun him and the scientists who raised his IQ treat him as little more than another laboratory specimen. It should come as no surprise that this story of a person who manages to be a member of two different minorities the mentally handicapped and the mentally superior should have appeared during a time of growing awareness of the problems and the rights of minority groups. Flowers for Algernon Literary Style Point of View Keyes's remarkable use of first person "I" point of view is perhaps the most important source of Flowers for Algernon's narrative power. Charlie's journey from an IQ of 68 to one almost three times as high, and his fall back into subnormal intelligence, is told in the form of "Progress Reports" written by Charlie for the scientists conducting the experiment that raised his IQ. The reports before and soon after the operation are written in non standard English, full of the kind of mistakes one would expect from writing by a mentally handicapped adult: Dr Strauss says I shoud rite down what I think and remembir and evrey thing that happins to me from now on. I dont no why but he says its importint so they will see if they can use me. As Charlie's intelligence grows, his reports become more and more literate and sophisticated. I've got to realize that when they continually admonish me to speak and write simply so that people who read these reports will be able to understand me, they are talking about themselves as well.

7 The striking contrasts between the earlier and later entries, both in style and content, dramatize both the changes Charlie undergoes and the obstacles he must overcome. Even more dramatic is the contrast between the high IQ entries and the final entries, when Charlie loses his intelligence and falls back into the semi literacy of the earlier entries. Keyes's use of Charlie as the narrator makes the reader's experience of Charlie's inevitable fate more immediate and more moving, and shows that, as a reviewer in the Times Literary Supplement put it, Keyes "has the technical equipment to keep us from shrugging off the pain." Foreshadowing Another source of the novel's power is the inevitability of Charlie's fate, once we learn that the results of the experiment will not be permanent. But even before we learn that the experiment has failed, Keyes offers several moments of foreshadowing, events which hint at what is to come. The most obvious of these center around Algernon the mouse, who has had the same operation as Charlie and whose progress and deterioration both mirrors and forecasts Charlie's own. When Algernon begins to grow restive, has trouble running the maze, and starts biting people, it does not bode well for Charlie. In addition, two minor characters Hilda, a nurse, and Fanny Birden, one of Charlie's coworkers at the bakery both invoke the story of Adam and Eve's expulsion from the Garden of Eden, which foreshadows Charlie's own "fall" from genius. Charlie's trip to the Warren State Home while he still possesses heightened intelligence foreshadows what is in store when he finally loses that intelligence. And, in a more subtle moment early in the novel, as Charlie is on the operating table before the surgery, he tells Dr. Strauss that he's scared. When Dr. Strauss reassures him that he will "just go to sleep," Charlie replies, "Thats what I'm skared about" a foreshadowing, perhaps, of Charlie's later descent into darkness. Setting The setting of Flowers for Algernon is New York City, with a brief episode in Chicago, in the present or near future. Although the physical landscape and cultural background is not a major part of the novel, critic Robert Scholes has noted that the very normality and nondistinctiveness of the setting makes the one "different" element of the novel the surgical procedure that raises Charlie's IQ all the more distinctive. And at one point in the novel, when Charlie has taken Algernon and is hiding out from the scientists, the crowded urban landscape of New York City becomes an important part of Charlie's attempts to come to terms with his situation: "On a hot night when everyone is out walking, or sitting in a theater, there is a rustling, and for a moment I brush against someone and sense the connection between the branch and trunk and the deep root." Irony Irony the difference between the way things appear to be and the way they really are plays an important part in Flowers for Algernon, Early in the novel, we see that Charlie's coworkers at the bakery, especially Joe Carp and Frank Reilly, are condescending and abusive towards him, insulting him to his face and playing cruel tricks on him. Charlie, however, writes that "lots of people laff at me and their my friends and we have fun. I

8 cant wait to be smart like my best fnends Joe Carp and Frank Reilly." Once Charlie becomes smart, he realizes that these people are not his friends, but he is then faced with another irony. Before the operation, he wanted "to be smart like other pepul so I can have lots of frends who like me." But his increased IQ causes the bakery workers to be afraid of him, the scientists who had been kindly and wise figures turn out to be limited human beings who see Charlie more as a laboratory experiment than a human being, and heightened intelligence is no help when he falls in love with Alice Kinnian. As Charlie the genius notes, "Ironic that all my intelligence doesn't help me solve a problem like this." And in a final irony, when Charlie returns to his IQ of 68 and seeks his old job back, Joe and Frank, the men who had persecuted him before, defend him against an attack from a new worker. Tragedy In literature, tragedy refers to works where a person, often of great achievement, is destroyed through a character flaw that he or she possesses. In classic tragedy, this "fall" is often from a great height (Oedipus and Hamlet were both royalty, for example) and is inevitable, given the character's character flaw. Flowers for Algernon is certainly about a fall from a height, and Charlie's descent from genius to subnormal intelligence is inevitable. Charlie does have character flaws an arrogance and impatience which appear when he becomes a genius but these do not lead to his fall. Instead, the "flaw" is outside of Charlie, in the technology which raises him to a great height and then allows him to fall back down. In this way, Keyes is able to use the devices of tragedy to make a very modern point: that our technology is as imperfect as we are. Flowers for Algernon Social Sensitivity Written during the height of the civil rights movement in the United States, Flowers for Algernon shows a profound concern with the rights of individuals to be treated as individuals, no matter what their condition in life. The early pages of the novel paint a grim portrait of how the mentally handicapped are treated, as Charlie is continually abused, verbally and physically, by his coworkers at the bakery. And when he becomes a genius, he is subject to a different sort of dehumanization, as the scientists in charge of the experiment regard him "as if I were some kind of newly created thing... No one... considered me an individual a human being." This is perhaps most dramatically expressed when, witnessing a slow witted boy being ridiculed for breaking dishes in a restaurant, Charlie lashes out at the customers: "Leave him alone! He can't understand. He can't help what he is... but for God's sake, have some respect! He's a human being!" The period 1959 to 1966, from the first publication of Flowers for Algernon as a short story to its publication as a novel, saw the rise of the civil rights movement in the United States. Although most immediately and dramatically focused on the task of securing equal rights for African Americans, the civil rights movement was accompanied by increasing attention to the issue of fair and equal treatment for all. The 1964 Civil Rights Bill prohibited racial discrimination; 1966, the year Flowers for Algernon was published, saw the founding of the

9 National Organization for Women. The rights of the mentally handicapped were also addressed during this time: in 1962 the President's Panel on Mental Retardation was organized, leading in 1968 to the Declaration of the General and Specific Rights of the Mentally Retarded. By the 1970s, the term "retardation" was replaced with "developmental disability," and specific provisions for the protection of the mentally handicapped from violence and discrimination became law. Flowers for Algernon's message of tolerance and understanding for the mentally handicapped reflects the social and political struggles of its day, and the years following the novel's publication saw many of these issues regarding developmental disability finally addressed in the legislature and the courts. In addition to the Civil Rights movement, the 1950s and 1960s also saw the rise of psychoanalysis as a generally accepted method of dealing with emotional disorders. The theories of Sigmund Freud, which saw human motivation as stemming largely from unconscious desires which are often traceable to childhood experiences and which frequently center on sex, were particularly influential during this time. Freud's theories were so widely discussed that most people, even if they were not trained in psychoanalysis, probably had some familiarity with concepts such as repression, neurosis, and the unconscious. Accordingly, the novel's focus on psychological themes, especially Charlie's emotional problems stemming from the abuse he suffered from his mother, was immediately familiar to the readers of the 1960s. Also on the rise in the 1950s and 1960s was funding for scientific research. Locked in a Cold War with the Soviet Union and still remembering Nazi Germany's V 2 rockets and the terrifying success of the atomic bomb, the United States during this era spent an unprecedented amount of money on scientific research. Government organizations such as the National Science Foundation, as well as private foundations and corporations, poured millions of dollars into scientific research, including "basic" research that would not necessarily yield immediate practical applications. With so much money available, competition for funding intensified and universities became increasingly focused on obtaining and keeping research funding. In Flowers for Algernon, Professor Nemur and Dr. Strauss's funding from the "Welburg Foundation," as well as the pressure Nemur feels to publish his results and secure his professional reputation, directly reflect this trend. Flowers for Algernon Compare and Contrast 1960s: The civil rights movement was in full force, with passage of legislation addressing discrimination against African Americans and increasing awareness of the rights of other oppressed groups, including the mentally handicapped. However, prejudice was still widespread, and there was as yet little to no legal protection for mentally handicapped persons.

10 Today: Legislative and legal protection for the mentally handicapped is extensive, while public sensitivity to the rights of the handicapped has increased markedly. Terms such as "retarded" and "feeble minded" have been replaced with less negatively charged terms such as "mentally challenged" and "developmentally disabled." However, civil rights as a whole is in a volatile period, as the public at large seems increasingly resistant to the demands of minority groups. 1960s: Psychoanalysis is increasingly accepted as a means of dealing with mental illness, while the theories of Sigmund Freud enjoy widespread public awareness and acceptance. Today: The treatment of emotional disorders is increasingly diverse, with traditional psychoanalysis complemented by various holistic, Eastern, and "New Age" approaches, as well as by the development of increasingly effective antidepressants and other psychoactive drugs. However, the theories of Sigmund Freud are not as widely accepted as in the past, and the public at large appears impatient with what it sees as abnormal or dangerous behavior "excused" because of past trauma. 1960s: The pressures of the Cold War lead to an unprecedented amount of spending on scientific research by both the U.S. government and private foundations and corporations. Today: With the Cold War over and budgets shrinking, competition for research funding is more intense than ever, and funding agencies are increasingly reluctant to support research that does not have immediate, practical results. Flowers for Algernon Ideas for Reports and Papers 1. Research the history of public attitudes towards mental retardation in the United States and discuss the problems Charlie Gordon faces in the novel in the context of this history. 2. The civil rights movement was in full force during the 1960s, with passage of legislation addressing discrimination against African Americans and increasing awareness of the rights of other oppressed groups, including the mentally handicapped. However, prejudice was still widespread, and there was as yet little to no legal protection for mentally handicapped persons. Has this attitude changed? Compare and contrast the treatment of mentally handicapped people during the 1960s with how they are treated today. Flowers for Algernon Topics for Further Study Research the history of public attitudes towards mental retardation in the United States and discuss the problems Charlie Gordon faces in the novel in the context of this history.

11 Research Sigmund Freud's theories of psychology and discuss how Charlie Gordon's emotional problems (not his low IQ) can be explained in terms of Freudian analysis. Read the original short story version of Flowers for Algernon and compare it with the novel. What changes have been made, and how do those changes affect the reader's response to the story? Flowers for Algernon Related Titles / Adaptations The Minds of Billy Milligan is Daniel Keyes's 1981 nonfiction study of the case of Billy Milligan. When Milligan was arrested and charged with rape in 1977, he was found to have at least twenty four distinct personalities. Milligan became the first person in U.S. history to be acquitted of a major felony by reason of multiple personality. Theodore Sturgeon's More Than Human, published in 1953, is a classic science fiction novel which, like Flowers for Algernon, is based on psychology and deals with the alienation of unusual individuals. The character of Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, published in 1960, is another example of an emotionally disabled victim of childhood abuse who is shunned by society. Novelist and critic Brian W. Aldiss has compared Charlie Gordon to Lenny, one of the main characters in John Steinbeck's classic American novel Of Mice and Men (1940). Flowers for Algernon has also been compared to A Canticle for Leibowitz, Walter M. Miller, Jr.'s 1959 novel of the world after a nuclear holocaust, as an example of "quality" science fiction. The original short story version of Flowers for Algernon was adapted for television as The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon for CBS Playhouse in The novel Flowers for Algernon was made into the feature film Charly in Cliff Robertson won the Academy Award as Best Actor for his portrayal of Charlie Gordon. The film is available from CBS/Fox Home Video. The novel has also been presented on the stage. David Rogers adapted the novel as a two act play, Flowers for Algernon, in 1969; a dramatic musical, Charlie and Algernon, was first produced in Canada in 1978 and played on Broadway in Stage plays based on the novel have also been produced in France, Australia, Poland, and Japan. Flowers for Algernon has also been adapted for radio: as a monodrama for Irish radio in 1983, and as a radio play in Czechoslovakia in Flowers for Algernon Media Adaptations The original short story version of Flowers for Algernon was adapted for television as The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon for CBS Playhouse in The novel Flowers for Algernon was made into the feature film Charly in Cliff

12 Robertson won the Academy Award as Best Actor for his portrayal of Charlie Gordon. Available from CBS/Fox Home Video. The novel has also been presented on the stage. David Rogers adapted the novel as a two act play, Flowers for Algernon, in 1969; a dramatic musical, Charlie and Algernon, was first produced in Canada in 1978 and played on Broadway in Stage plays based on the novel have also been produced in France Australia, Poland, and Japan. Flowers for Algernon has also been adapted for radio: as a monodrama for Irish radio in 1983, and as a radio play in Czechoslovakia in Flowers for Algernon What Do I Read Next? The Minds of Billy Milligan is Daniel Keyes's 1981 nonfiction study of the case of Billy Milligan. When Milligan was arrested and charged with rape in 1977, he was found to have at least twenty four distinct personalities. Milligan became the first person in U.S. history to be acquitted of a major felony by reason of multiple personality. The Science Fiction (/topics/science fiction) Hall of Fame, Vol. I, edited by Robert Silverberg, is a 1970 anthology of classic science fiction stories which contains "Flowers for Algernon," Keyes's original short story version. Theodore Sturgeon's More Than Human (/topics/more than), published in 1953, is a classic science fiction novel which, like Flowers for Algernon, is based on psychology and deals with the alienation of unusual individuals. The character of Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird (/topics/to kill a mockingbird) by Harper Lee (/topics/harper lee) published in 1960, is another example of an emotionally disabled victim of childhood abuse who is shunned by society. Novelist and critic Brian W. Aldiss has compared Charlie Gordon to Lenny, one of the main characters in John Steinbeck's classic American novel Of Mice and Men (/topics/of mice and men) (1940). Flowers for Algernon has been compared to A Canticle for Leibowitz (/topics/canticleleibowitz), Walter M. Miller, Jr.'s 1959 novel of the world after a nuclear holocaust, as an example of "quality" science fiction. Flowers for Algernon For Further Reference "Flowers for Algernon." In Literature and Its Times: Profiles of 300 Notable Literary Works and the Historical Events That Influenced Them, Volume 4: World War II to the Affluent Fifties ( s). Edited by Joyce Moss and George Wilson. Detroit: Gale, 1997, pp Overview of the story, including historical background, publication information, and critical reception.

13 Small, Robert, Jr. "Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes." In Censored Books: Critical Viewpoints. Edited by Nicholas J. Karolides, Lee Burress, and John M. Kean. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1993, pp Small recounts the numerous forms in which Flowers for Algernon has been published and praises the author's ingenuity. Keyes, Daniel. "Algernon, Charlie, and I: A Writer's Journey." The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction 98 (May 2000): 64. Keyes explains the process that led to the completion of Flowers for Algernon. Flowers for Algernon Bibliography and Further Reading Sources Aldiss, Brian W., with David Wingrove. Trillion Year Spree: The History of Science Fiction. Gollancz, Clareson, Thomas D. Understanding Contemporary American Science Fiction: The Formative Period, University of South Carolina Press, 1990, pp Fremont Smith, Eliot. "The Message and the Maze," in New York Times, March 7, 1966, p. 25. Hillegas, Mark R. "Other Worlds to Conquer," in Saturday Review, Vol. 49, March 26, 1966, pp "Making up a Mind" (review of Flowers for Algernon), in Times Literary Supplement, No. 3360, July 21, 1966, p Scholes, Robert. "Structural Fabulation," in his Structural Fabulation An Essay on Fiction of the Future. University of Notre Dame Press, 1975, pp Further Reading DISCovering Most Studied Authors. Gale, Offers biographical and critical information about Keyes. Flowers for Algernon Bibliography (Survey of Young Adult Fiction) Suggested Readings Clareson, Thomas D. Understanding Contemporary American Science Fiction: The Formative Period, Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1990

14 Clute, John, and Peter Nichols. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. New York: St. Martin s Press, Gunn, James. The New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. New York: Viking Penguin, Pringle, David. Science Fiction: The One Hundred Best Novels. New York: Carrol & Graf, 1985.

Flowers for Algernon. Teaching Unit. Individual Learning Packet. by Daniel Keyes. ISBN Item No

Flowers for Algernon. Teaching Unit. Individual Learning Packet. by Daniel Keyes. ISBN Item No Individual Learning Packet Teaching Unit by Daniel Keyes Copyright 1999 by Prestwick House Inc., P.O. Box 658, Clayton, DE 19938. 1-800-932-4593. www.prestwickhouse.com Permission to copy this unit for

More information

TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS. LitPlan Teacher Pack for Flowers For Algernon based on the book by Daniel Keyes

TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS. LitPlan Teacher Pack for Flowers For Algernon based on the book by Daniel Keyes TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS LitPlan Teacher Pack for Flowers For Algernon based on the book by Daniel Keyes Written By Barbara M. Linde, MA Ed. 1996 Teacher s Pet Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved

More information

APPENDICES. Author s Biography and Works. graduation, Keyes worked brieily as an associate editor for the magazine Marvel

APPENDICES. Author s Biography and Works. graduation, Keyes worked brieily as an associate editor for the magazine Marvel APPENDICES Author s Biography and Works Daniel Keyes was born in Brooklyn, New York, on August 9, 1927. He was educated at Brooklyn College, where he received an A.B. degree in 1950. After graduation,

More information

Flowers for Algernon

Flowers for Algernon Teaching Daniel Keyes's Flowers for Algernon from by Priscilla Beth Baker Flowers for Algernon General Introduction to the Work Introduction to Flowers for Algernon Daniel Keyes wa s born in Brooklyn,

More information

Multidimensional Trauma Recovery and Resiliency Interview MTRRI 1

Multidimensional Trauma Recovery and Resiliency Interview MTRRI 1 Multidimensional Trauma Recovery and MTRRI 1 Harvey, M.R., Westen, D., Lebowitz, L., Saunders, E., Avi-Yonah, O. and Harney, P. (1994) 1 2000 Version Victims of Violence Program Department of Psychiatry

More information

the Scarlet Ibis Background James Hurst published in the 1960s (July)

the Scarlet Ibis Background James Hurst published in the 1960s (July) 1 the Scarlet Ibis Background Author Publication James Hurst published in the 1960s (July) Influence the Scarlet Ibis was the first and only work of Hurst's to achieve widespread success. 2 the Scarlet

More information

The Diana McDonald Writer's Challenge

The Diana McDonald Writer's Challenge Parkland College The Diana McDonald Writer's Challenge Student Works 4-1-2018 Moving up the Ladder Sami Issa Parkland College Recommended Citation Issa, Sami, "Moving up the Ladder" (2018). The Diana McDonald

More information

OUT OF POSITION (DEV AND LEE) BY KYELL GOLD DOWNLOAD EBOOK : OUT OF POSITION (DEV AND LEE) BY KYELL GOLD PDF

OUT OF POSITION (DEV AND LEE) BY KYELL GOLD DOWNLOAD EBOOK : OUT OF POSITION (DEV AND LEE) BY KYELL GOLD PDF OUT OF POSITION (DEV AND LEE) BY KYELL GOLD DOWNLOAD EBOOK : OUT OF POSITION (DEV AND LEE) BY KYELL GOLD PDF Click link bellow and free register to download ebook: OUT OF POSITION (DEV AND LEE) BY KYELL

More information

Pictures of You. The Writer as Reviewer: A Note from the Author. Questions for Discussion A I N L G O N Q U

Pictures of You. The Writer as Reviewer: A Note from the Author. Questions for Discussion A I N L G O N Q U READERS ROUND TABLE Pictures of You The Writer as Reviewer: A Note from the Author { Questions for Discussion A I N L G O N Q U The Writer as Reviewer a note from the author Don t do it, it ll kill your

More information

To track responses to texts and use those responses as a point of departure for talking or writing about texts

To track responses to texts and use those responses as a point of departure for talking or writing about texts Answers Highlight Text First Teacher Copy ACTIVITY 1.1: Previewing the Unit: Understanding Challenges ACTIVITY 1.2 Understanding the Hero s Journey Archetype Learning Targets Analyze how a film uses the

More information

Teacher s Guide Reading Support Collections with Downloadable Teacher s Guides

Teacher s Guide Reading Support Collections with Downloadable Teacher s Guides Recorded Books Teacher s Guide Reading Support Collections with Downloadable Teacher s Guides Thank you for downloading your free Teacher s Guides! Reading Support Collections are a unique resource designed

More information

The Old Man and the Sea Study Guide. Finding the Beauty in Suffering

The Old Man and the Sea Study Guide. Finding the Beauty in Suffering Finding the Beauty in Suffering After failing to catch a single fish for 84 days, old Cuban fisherman, Santiago, makes the catch of a lifetime: a massive marlin too strong to reel in. For three days, Santiago

More information

Welcome to the Crohn s & Colitis Foundation s Online Support Group for Caregivers

Welcome to the Crohn s & Colitis Foundation s Online Support Group for Caregivers Week 4: Managing the Rollercoaster Welcome to the Crohn s & Colitis Foundation s Online Support Group for Caregivers Managing the ups-and-downs of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) can often feel like a

More information

3. Describe themes in the novel and trace their development throughout the text.

3. Describe themes in the novel and trace their development throughout the text. Separate, but Equal? Throughout the South from 1876 to 1965, laws, known as Jim Crow laws, created legalized segregation. African-Americans attended different schools, ate in different restaurants, rode

More information

Parts of a Short Story: Literary Devices E N G L I S H I

Parts of a Short Story: Literary Devices E N G L I S H I Parts of a Short Story: Literary Devices E N G L I S H I Short Stories Short Stories = a brief fictional narrative intended to be read in a single setting. A good short story leaves the reader with a unified

More information

1. How old were you when you had your first drink? Describe what happened and how you felt.

1. How old were you when you had your first drink? Describe what happened and how you felt. Introduction Congratulations and welcome to treatment! You have made a monumental step in recovery. You can be proud of yourself. You can feel confident that treatment works. Ninety percent of patients

More information

Of Men and Friendship. George and Lennie are standing in the forests right in front of the river. George wants

Of Men and Friendship. George and Lennie are standing in the forests right in front of the river. George wants Schmidtt 1 Billy Schmidtt Mr. Wittwer English 9-6 18 December 2012 Of Men and Friendship George and Lennie are standing in the forests right in front of the river. George wants Lennie to imagine their

More information

Organize for Writing:

Organize for Writing: Organize for Writing: REASON 1 Sophisticated emotions REASON 2 Awareness Save your BEST reason/strongest reason for last Expository writing Analyze Prompt Prewriting Determine quality reasons Elaboration

More information

The Pearl. Teaching Unit. Advanced Placement in English Literature and Composition. Individual Learning Packet. by John Steinbeck

The Pearl. Teaching Unit. Advanced Placement in English Literature and Composition. Individual Learning Packet. by John Steinbeck Advanced Placement in English Literature and Composition Individual Learning Packet Teaching Unit The Pearl by John Steinbeck written by Priscilla Beth Baker Copyright 2010 by Prestwick House Inc., P.O.

More information

10/5/16& Getting Gritty. Difficult subject matter in YA and MG

10/5/16& Getting Gritty. Difficult subject matter in YA and MG Getting Gritty Difficult subject matter in YA and MG 1& 2& ! Death What constitutes dark subject matter?! Serious illness and injury! Violence and physical abuse! Emotional abuse and bullying! Sexual abuse!

More information

Relationship Fix Tip #1: Do Some Self-reflection.

Relationship Fix Tip #1: Do Some Self-reflection. Introduction No matter how long you've been in a relationship, the foundation of a strong and healthy one can easily be destroyed. When you notice that your relationship is spiraling downwards, it's an

More information

The Great Gatsby Study Questions

The Great Gatsby Study Questions The Great Gatsby Study Questions Chapter 1 1. How does Nick describe himself at the beginning of the novel? 2. How does Nick describe Tom Buchanan? 3. Who is Jordan Baker? 4. What is Gatsby doing when

More information

HOW TO SURPRISE YOUR READERS

HOW TO SURPRISE YOUR READERS HOW TO SURPRISE YOUR READERS A CBI Special Report by Laura Backes Children's Book Insider, LLC May not be redistributed without permission. How to Surprise Your Readers by Laura Backes It's essential that

More information

Lovereading Reader reviews of The Farm Beneath the Water by Helen Peters

Lovereading Reader reviews of The Farm Beneath the Water by Helen Peters Lovereading Reader reviews of The Farm Beneath the Water by Helen Peters Below are the complete reviews, written by Lovereading members. Dulcie Johnson, age 11 I loved the secret hen house theatre and

More information

A Ragged Freak. I m glad of that. I don t want to be ignorant. I didn t use to care, but I do now. I want

A Ragged Freak. I m glad of that. I don t want to be ignorant. I didn t use to care, but I do now. I want Katona 1 Emily Katona Professor Ings English 333 September 25, 2009 A Ragged Freak I m glad of that. I don t want to be ignorant. I didn t use to care, but I do now. I want to grow up spectable (Alger

More information

The Top 8 Emotions. Betrayal. Ø Betrayal Ø Guilt Ø Disappointment Ø Anger Ø Vengefulness Ø Fear Ø Frustration Ø Paranoid Feelings

The Top 8 Emotions. Betrayal. Ø Betrayal Ø Guilt Ø Disappointment Ø Anger Ø Vengefulness Ø Fear Ø Frustration Ø Paranoid Feelings The Top 8 Emotions Ø Betrayal Ø Guilt Ø Disappointment Ø Anger Ø Vengefulness Ø Fear Ø Frustration Ø Paranoid Feelings Almost everyone faces these eight emotions when they find out about an affair. If

More information

CURRICULUM CATALOG. English Grade 8 (1120) VA

CURRICULUM CATALOG. English Grade 8 (1120) VA 2018-19 CURRICULUM CATALOG Table of Contents COURSE OVERVIEW... 1 UNIT 1: SKILLS WORKSHOP... 2 UNIT 2: AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION... 2 UNIT 3: DISPLAY OF NATURAL HISTORY... 3 UNIT 4: WORLD CIVILIZATION...

More information

Literary Criticism Overview. revised English 1302: Composition II D. Glen Smith, instructor

Literary Criticism Overview. revised English 1302: Composition II D. Glen Smith, instructor Literary Criticism Overview Six Types of Analysis 1. Response Essay emotional reaction to work 2. Explication Essay primarily for poetry analysis; break the poem apart line by line 3. Historical/Social/Cultural

More information

The Bean Trees Study Guide. Watching Love Grow

The Bean Trees Study Guide. Watching Love Grow Watching Love Grow When Taylor Greer leaves home in search of a better life, she never expects to become the foster mother to an abused, abandoned child, whom she names Turtle. Forced to start afresh,

More information

Weight Challenges and Food Addiction

Weight Challenges and Food Addiction Weight Challenges and Food Addiction Healing Food Addiction By Dr. Margaret Paul Food addiction is a difficult addiction to deal with because you can't just stop eating. Discover a major underlying cause

More information

That s how I feel after reading Harper Lee s second coming of Atticus Finch in the just released novel Go Set a Watchman.

That s how I feel after reading Harper Lee s second coming of Atticus Finch in the just released novel Go Set a Watchman. SOMETIMES I wished some things would remain the same. That s how I feel after reading Harper Lee s second coming of Atticus Finch in the just released novel Go Set a Watchman. In this second novel, Atticus

More information

Lovereading4kids Reader reviews of The Bubble Boy By Stewart Foster

Lovereading4kids Reader reviews of The Bubble Boy By Stewart Foster Lovereading4kids Reader reviews of The Bubble Boy By Stewart Foster Below are the complete reviews, written by the Lovereading4kids members. Tomasz Hawryszczuk, age 11 A truly inspirational and unique

More information

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. of the key terms. Each point is presented as follows.

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. of the key terms. Each point is presented as follows. CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION This chapter presents background of the study, statement of the problems, purposes of the study, significance of the study, scope and limitation, and definition of the key terms.

More information

Summer Reading Assignment English 10

Summer Reading Assignment English 10 Summer Reading Assignment English 10 A coming of age story is a subgenre of literature and film that focuses on a character s personal growth from adolescence to adulthood. A coming of age story focuses

More information

Stepping up and Stepping out

Stepping up and Stepping out Stepping up and Stepping out 10 ways to be a better leader By Rowdy (Ron) McLean J.P, M.B.A, F.A.I.M, C.C.M The very essence of leadership is that you have a vision Theodore Hesburgh Stepping up and Stepping

More information

3. Describe themes in the novel and trace their development throughout the text.

3. Describe themes in the novel and trace their development throughout the text. Taking a Stand Have you ever spoken out against injustice, even when it angered others? This image from the 1962 movie To Kill a Mockingbird shows Atticus Finch, played by Gregory Peck, when he takes a

More information

Character Development Worksheet For:

Character Development Worksheet For: Goal (Character's) Goal (Writer's) Character Development Worksheet For: Character's purpose. They believe that attaining this goal will bring them success and happiness, though sometimes what they think

More information

7 Tips for Outsmarting Your Addiction

7 Tips for Outsmarting Your Addiction 7 Tips for Outsmarting Your Addiction Do you ever try to convince yourself that things in your life aren t really how they seem to be? Do you tell yourself that things are better or worse than they actually

More information

Prompt List 1. What if...

Prompt List 1. What if... Prompt List 1 What if... What would happen if you could fly whenever you wanted? When would you use this ability? What would happen if there were no television? Why would this be good? Bad? What would

More information

A Novel by John Knowles

A Novel by John Knowles Communications II / Lail Theatre Unit 1 COMMUNICATIONS II / LAIL A Separate Peace A Novel by John Knowles Introducing the Novel It is unusual for an author s first novel to earn awards and a wide audience,

More information

Unhealthy Relationships: Top 7 Warning Signs By Dr. Deb Schwarz-Hirschhorn

Unhealthy Relationships: Top 7 Warning Signs By Dr. Deb Schwarz-Hirschhorn Unhealthy Relationships: Top 7 Warning Signs By Dr. Deb Schwarz-Hirschhorn When people have long-term marriages and things are bad, we can work on fixing them. It s better to resolve problems so kids can

More information

Touching Spirit Bear by Ben Mikaelsen

Touching Spirit Bear by Ben Mikaelsen Name Lit Section/Rouse Touching Spirit Bear by Ben Mikaelsen Chapter 1 1. What has Cole agreed to do for one year? Why? 2. Who is Garvey? 3. Who is Edwin? 4. Cole must wear his clothes inside out for two

More information

Grade 6 English Language Arts

Grade 6 English Language Arts What should good student writing at this grade level look like? The answer lies in the writing itself. The Writing Standards in Action Project uses high quality student writing samples to illustrate what

More information

Summer Reading Requirements

Summer Reading Requirements Rocky River High School 20951 Detroit Road Rocky River Ohio 44116 Summer Reading Requirements 2018 2019 Dear Parents and Guardians, Each summer students are required to do a summer reading project. The

More information

Flashback, Flashforward & Foreshadowing. English 9

Flashback, Flashforward & Foreshadowing. English 9 Flashback, Flashforward & Foreshadowing English 9 Flashback is an interruption in the present action of a story to tell about something that happened in the past a jump back in time. Flashbacks are interruptions

More information

Use Reading Strategies Ask Questions Use Reading Strategies Ask Questions Cultural Connection Insanity Defense Reading Proficiency Visual Learning

Use Reading Strategies Ask Questions Use Reading Strategies Ask Questions Cultural Connection Insanity Defense Reading Proficiency Visual Learning B sk Questions Point out to students that good readers ask lots of questions as they work their way through a text. Model for students other questions that these first paragraphs might prompt a reader

More information

Essay : Opinion. Reason 1. Reason 2. Give opposite viewpoint

Essay : Opinion. Reason 1. Reason 2. Give opposite viewpoint Introduction. Par. 1 Main Body Par. 4 Conclusion Par. 5 Essay : Opinion State your topic and your opinion clearly Reason 1 Reason 2 Give opposite viewpoint Restate your opinion using different words Example

More information

THE MAKEUP ARTIST CAPSULE MEETING GOTTFRIED

THE MAKEUP ARTIST CAPSULE MEETING GOTTFRIED THE MAKEUP ARTIST CAPSULE She turned her back on her own beauty while still young, finding it had brought her more pain than joy. Now she devotes herself to shaping perfection on the faces of others: seeing

More information

Directed Writing 1123/01

Directed Writing 1123/01 1123/01 Directed Writing 1123/01 ENGLISH LANGUAGE RIZWAN JAVED Contents: Account writing 2 Formal Letters 6 Informal Letters 11 Newspaper and Magazine Articles 14 Report Writing 16 Speech Writing 19 Page

More information

A Writing Workshop Introductory Handout

A Writing Workshop Introductory Handout A Writing Workshop Introductory Handout During the course of the semester, you will be required to turn in four separate, polished pieces that show your developing skills as a writer. Each piece must be

More information

Whether in a short story or a long novel, readers want it to do three things for them:

Whether in a short story or a long novel, readers want it to do three things for them: 1 As writers advance through short stories to novels, some important changes are required, starting with the first page. Whether in a short story or a long novel, readers want it to do three things for

More information

( /75) = TOTAL SCORE. Of Mice and Men. Name: ( /35) = completion. English I CP ( /15) = Page #s. Due: Date of the Test!

( /75) = TOTAL SCORE. Of Mice and Men. Name: ( /35) = completion. English I CP ( /15) = Page #s. Due: Date of the Test! 1 Name: ( /35) = completion Ms. Mauro ( /25) = **scoring** English I CP ( /15) = Page #s Due: Date of the Test! ( /75) = TOTAL SCORE Of Mice and Men Character George Milton Description as discovered throughout

More information

2. GENERAL CLARIFICATION OF INTRINSIC ELEMENTS IN LITERATURE. In this chapter, the writer will apply the definition and explanation about

2. GENERAL CLARIFICATION OF INTRINSIC ELEMENTS IN LITERATURE. In this chapter, the writer will apply the definition and explanation about 2. GENERAL CLARIFICATION OF INTRINSIC ELEMENTS IN LITERATURE In this chapter, the writer will apply the definition and explanation about intrinsic elements of a novel theoretically because they are integrated

More information

An Insider s Guide to Filling Out Your Advance Directive

An Insider s Guide to Filling Out Your Advance Directive An Insider s Guide to Filling Out Your Advance Directive What is an Advance Directive for Healthcare Decisions? The Advance Directive is a form that a person can complete while she still has the capacity

More information

John Steinbeck. Of Mice and Men

John Steinbeck. Of Mice and Men Of Mice and Men Born in Salinas on February 27, 1902. Steinbeck was a naturalist and a regionalist; his novels are based on first-hand research. His father was a manager at a flour mill, and his mother

More information

Lets play Video Games. Video games have always caused a controversy. Are they too violent? Are they

Lets play Video Games. Video games have always caused a controversy. Are they too violent? Are they Landeros 1 Victoria Landeros 9 November 2013 Lets play Video Games Video games have always caused a controversy. Are they too violent? Are they exposing children to too much violence? What is the right

More information

180 Questions for Connecting Circles and Delightful Discussions Compiled and modified by Elaine Shpungin, Ph.D., Conflict180.com

180 Questions for Connecting Circles and Delightful Discussions Compiled and modified by Elaine Shpungin, Ph.D., Conflict180.com 180 Questions for Connecting Circles and Delightful Discussions Compiled and modified by Elaine Shpungin, Ph.D., Conflict180.com Edited from, and inspired by, questions compiled by Mary Davenport (Edutopia.com),

More information

Grading Scale Assignment Weighting per Unit With Projects Assignment Weighting per Unit Without Projects

Grading Scale Assignment Weighting per Unit With Projects Assignment Weighting per Unit Without Projects English I CCSS Students should enter this course with a foundation in fiction, drama, poetry, mythology, and nonfiction. This course will provide them with the opportunity to build on that foundation.

More information

Media Today, 6 th Edition. Chapter Recaps & Study Guide. Chapter 2: Making Sense of Research on Media Effects and Media Culture

Media Today, 6 th Edition. Chapter Recaps & Study Guide. Chapter 2: Making Sense of Research on Media Effects and Media Culture 1 Media Today, 6 th Edition Chapter Recaps & Study Guide Chapter 2: Making Sense of Research on Media Effects and Media Culture This chapter provides an overview of the different ways researchers try to

More information

Fahrenheit 451. By Ray Bradbury

Fahrenheit 451. By Ray Bradbury Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury Ray Bradbury s Fahrenheit 451 is a type of DYSTOPIC/DYSTOPIAN novel. That means it is about a future that is bleak, dark and dreary. Questions to Consider While Reading:

More information

How to Make Sure That You ll Always Have Something to Write About. Fran Santoro Hamilton

How to Make Sure That You ll Always Have Something to Write About. Fran Santoro Hamilton How to Make Sure That You ll Always Have Something to Write About Fran Santoro Hamilton For many people the hardest part of writing is thinking of something to write about. This problem can be bypassed

More information

Sylvia Plath English 1302: Composition II D. Glen Smith, instructor

Sylvia Plath English 1302: Composition II D. Glen Smith, instructor Sylvia Plath Plath s Similarities with T. S. Eliot s Prufrock : psychological sequence of thoughts opposed to logical sequences of information a monologue showing a private voice in a conversational tone

More information

Spring 2019 Course Descriptions Subject to change 7 Aug 2018

Spring 2019 Course Descriptions Subject to change 7 Aug 2018 Spring 2019 Course Descriptions Subject to change 7 Aug 2018 ART 105: INTRODUCTION TO THE VISUAL ARTS (3) Lecture course which studies architecture, painting, and sculpture with emphasis on social and

More information

Learning with Quick Reads

Learning with Quick Reads Learning with Quick Reads Bite-sized books by bestselling authors The Anniversary edited by Veronica Henry About the book From family secrets to unlikely romance, from wartime tragedy to ghostly messages,

More information

University Application Essay Writing Tips

University Application Essay Writing Tips Write an Effective Application Essay University Application Essay Writing Tips A great application essay will present a vivid, personal, and compelling view of you to the admissions staff. It will round

More information

A Good Man Is Hard to Find by Flannery O Connor. PowerPoint By Carol Davis

A Good Man Is Hard to Find by Flannery O Connor. PowerPoint By Carol Davis A Good Man Is Hard to Find by Flannery O Connor PowerPoint By Carol Davis Flannery O Connor Home in Milledgeville,Georgia Lived on a farm with her mother Raised peacocks Endured constant treatment for

More information

Contents. Arts and Leisure. Culture and History. Environment. Health. Science Facts. People Profiles. Social Science. Sports and Hobbies.

Contents. Arts and Leisure. Culture and History. Environment. Health. Science Facts. People Profiles. Social Science. Sports and Hobbies. Arts and Leisure 1. Read It or See It? / 5 Contents 11. A Controversial Restoration / 65 Culture and History 2. Superstitions About Birds / 11 12. The Flood / 71 Environment 3. Alaska Is Melting! / 17

More information

The Fear Eliminator. Special Report prepared by ThoughtElevators.com

The Fear Eliminator. Special Report prepared by ThoughtElevators.com The Fear Eliminator Special Report prepared by ThoughtElevators.com Copyright ThroughtElevators.com under the US Copyright Act of 1976 and all other applicable international, federal, state and local laws,

More information

Image 1. Artist Kara Walker in front of one of her pieces at Sikkema Jenkins & Co., an art gallery in New York, in Photo by: Tina Fineberg/AP.

Image 1. Artist Kara Walker in front of one of her pieces at Sikkema Jenkins & Co., an art gallery in New York, in Photo by: Tina Fineberg/AP. Artists: Kara Walker By The Art Story, adapted by Newsela staff on 01.29.18 Word Count 825 Level 820L Image 1. Artist Kara Walker in front of one of her pieces at Sikkema Jenkins & Co., an art gallery

More information

Self-Esteem and the Success of Your Book

Self-Esteem and the Success of Your Book Self-Esteem and the Success of Your Book by Rob Eagar **Bonus article based on Rob Eagar s Sell Your Book Like Wildfire (bookwildfire.com) What if the success of a book has more to do with what s in the

More information

Book Club, Fall 2015

Book Club, Fall 2015 Name: (pre-test) Book Club, Fall 2015 Below is a paragraph from a dairy of a young woman who is a slave in Virginia in 1859 in the United States. It is fiction. The author is Patricia McKissack. Please

More information

Module D חורף תשע ו 2016

Module D חורף תשע ו 2016 פתרון בגרות שאלון ד Module D חורף תשע ו 2016 414, 016115 שאלון Part I - Question 1 The narrator disliked Mr. Kelada when they meet for the first time because Mr. Kelada(-) looks British calls him mister

More information

Do Now: Weekly Vocab Sunday! 1) Read through your Weekly Vocab Sunday booklet. 2) Take a minute and read the word Repercussions. Ask yourself what do

Do Now: Weekly Vocab Sunday! 1) Read through your Weekly Vocab Sunday booklet. 2) Take a minute and read the word Repercussions. Ask yourself what do Do Now: Weekly Vocab Sunday! 1) Read through your Weekly Vocab Sunday booklet. 2) Take a minute and read the word Repercussions. Ask yourself what do you think that the word means? 3) Take out a pencil/pen

More information

THE PSYCHOTHERAPIST CAPSULE MEETING GOTTFRIED

THE PSYCHOTHERAPIST CAPSULE MEETING GOTTFRIED THE PSYCHOTHERAPIST CAPSULE Commissioned by Gottfried Himmelhaus to help the cast of Stolen Moments deal with the psychological demands of the Method style of acting that he requires from them, she is

More information

The Fears of Michael Myers

The Fears of Michael Myers 1 Professor Saenz English 1B December 5, 2012 The Fears of Michael Myers Horror films go back over 100 years starting with The Hunchback of Notre-Dame in the 1900s. Horror is one of the most favorable

More information

"Of course you always lose your voice," she said "Your technique is wrong." And from that moment on, my life would never be the same.

Of course you always lose your voice, she said Your technique is wrong. And from that moment on, my life would never be the same. raesent Tempor Introduction "Of course you always lose your voice," she said "Your technique is wrong." And from that moment on, my life would never be the same. Yes, this is a story about one of my hobbies:

More information

Introducing the Novella

Introducing the Novella Introducing the Novella Kafka is important to us because his predicament is the predicament of modern man. British poet W. H. Auden Kafka certainly does not provide an interpretation of the world.... What

More information

LITERATURE V C E STEPS TO SUCCESS SAMPLE PAGES. Anne Mitchell

LITERATURE V C E STEPS TO SUCCESS SAMPLE PAGES. Anne Mitchell V C E LITERATURE STEPS TO SUCCESS Anne Mitchell 2 FEATURES OF LITERARY TEXTS The features of various kinds of texts are described in this chapter. Before you engage in a more in-depth analysis and start

More information

Newborn and infant death Regaining nor mality Miscarriage Feelings You and your wife/partner Stillbirth

Newborn and infant death Regaining nor mality Miscarriage Feelings You and your wife/partner Stillbirth fathers grieve too The birth of a baby is normally seen as a happy event, not a tragic one. The death of your precious baby will probably be the most difficult and painful thing you will ever experience.

More information

More Thinking Matters Too Understanding My Life Patterns

More Thinking Matters Too Understanding My Life Patterns Self Assessment From time to time I answer the questions below. I don t think long before I answer each one. I try to be quick and honest with myself. I think about the people I interact with the most

More information

THE AHA MOMENT: HELPING CLIENTS DEVELOP INSIGHT INTO PROBLEMS. James F. Whittenberg, PhD, LPC-S, CSC Eunice Lerma, PhD, LPC-S, CSC

THE AHA MOMENT: HELPING CLIENTS DEVELOP INSIGHT INTO PROBLEMS. James F. Whittenberg, PhD, LPC-S, CSC Eunice Lerma, PhD, LPC-S, CSC THE AHA MOMENT: HELPING CLIENTS DEVELOP INSIGHT INTO PROBLEMS James F. Whittenberg, PhD, LPC-S, CSC Eunice Lerma, PhD, LPC-S, CSC THE HELPING SKILLS MODEL Exploration Client-centered theory Insight Cognitive

More information

2. REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE

2. REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE 2. REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE 2.1 The Definition of Novel The word comes from the Italian, Novella, which means the new staff that small. The novel developed in England and America. The novel was originally

More information

Countable versus Uncountable nouns

Countable versus Uncountable nouns Countable versus Uncountable nouns Okay, before we start class, would you like a cup of tea or coffee? I smell a rat. You re not normally this generous. Don t be so critical. Tea of coffee? Tea please.

More information

ACT PREPARTION ROY HIGH SCHOOL MRS. HARTNETT

ACT PREPARTION ROY HIGH SCHOOL MRS. HARTNETT ACT PREPARTION ROY HIGH SCHOOL MRS. HARTNETT 2016-17 Reading Passage Tips Skim the passage for general comprehension all the way through before answering the questions (~ 3 minutes) What is the speaker

More information

Overview. Grade Level

Overview. Grade Level Title: Girl with Father Series: Gentleman Farmer - #4 of 5 Date: 1943, Poland Dimensions: 5 3/8 x 7 11/16 in (13.5 x 19.5 cm) Medium: Paper, watercolor, graphite pencil Location: Nelly Toll Collection

More information

NOTE: Some nouns may be both COUNTABLE and UNCOUNTABLE but the meaning changes

NOTE: Some nouns may be both COUNTABLE and UNCOUNTABLE but the meaning changes GRAMMAR 8 > PAGE 1 OF 5 COUNTABLE A / an + singular noun an apple, a job, a man Can be made plural apples, jobs, men Use some / any + plural some answers, any ideas Few, many with plurals few people, many

More information

Appendix T Questions for Batterers, Children, and Non-Offending Parents

Appendix T Questions for Batterers, Children, and Non-Offending Parents These questions have been taken from the following sources: Safe and Together TM model, David Mandel & Associates; Child Welfare Practices for Cases with Domestic Violence, Oregon DHS; Minnesota s Domestic

More information

Understanding what influences your mental health and wellbeing

Understanding what influences your mental health and wellbeing Further information about the content, reference sources or production of this leaflet can be obtained from the Patient Information Centre. If you would like to tell us what you think about this leaflet

More information

Raising Difficult Issues with Your Service Provider

Raising Difficult Issues with Your Service Provider Sel f-de ter m in at ion Series Raising Difficult Issues with Your Service Provider Determine Your Destiny Raising Difficult Issues with Your Service Provider Prepared by: Carol A. Petersen, M.Ed. Jessica

More information

Romance in Sports and Literature. In sports, as in life, there is a beginning and an end to every game, but what

Romance in Sports and Literature. In sports, as in life, there is a beginning and an end to every game, but what Loera 1 Patrick Loera Professor Warner English 112B 26 November 2013 Romance in Sports and Literature In sports, as in life, there is a beginning and an end to every game, but what happens in between will

More information

On the GED essay, you ll need to write a short essay, about four

On the GED essay, you ll need to write a short essay, about four Write Smart 373 What Is the GED Essay Like? On the GED essay, you ll need to write a short essay, about four or five paragraphs long. The GED essay gives you a prompt that asks you to talk about your beliefs

More information

Instead, when we say act break we re talking about a literary concept. We use act breaks to discuss critical turning points in the story:

Instead, when we say act break we re talking about a literary concept. We use act breaks to discuss critical turning points in the story: Three Act Structure excerpt from This was initially popularized in the book Screenplay by Syd Field and has now become the language of Hollywood. It might be useful if I first point out that there are

More information

Name Class Date. Zoo Edward D. Hoch

Name Class Date. Zoo Edward D. Hoch Name Class Date Read the following story. Make an inference about the underlined sentences in the spaces provided. Be sure to start with, I can infer Zoo Edward D. Hoch I can infer that the children are

More information

Understanding what influences your mental health and wellbeing

Understanding what influences your mental health and wellbeing Understanding what influences your mental health and wellbeing About this booklet If you want to make sense of your experiences, or if you are struggling with your mental health, there are some key questions

More information

DD PRINTED IN USA Lilly USA, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. A Step-by-Step Approach to Building a Personal Network of Support

DD PRINTED IN USA Lilly USA, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. A Step-by-Step Approach to Building a Personal Network of Support DD60118 1209 PRINTED IN USA. 2010. Lilly USA, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. A Step-by-Step Approach to Building a Personal Network of Support STEP 2: Choosing ASupport Partner The Power of Support....9 Finding

More information

Lesson plan Level 2 Elementary/Lower-intermediate CEF: A2 KET

Lesson plan Level 2 Elementary/Lower-intermediate CEF: A2 KET Lesson Plan Lesson plan Level 2 Elementary/Lower-intermediate CEF: A2 KET Cambridge Discovery Readers Killer Bees Jane Rollason Aims To make students interested in the book. To familiarise students with

More information

The 7 BIG Mistakes That People Make When Dealing With The Boss From Hell

The 7 BIG Mistakes That People Make When Dealing With The Boss From Hell The 7 BIG Mistakes That People Make When Dealing With The Boss From Hell 1. Think you can change them Perhaps the biggest mistake you can make when you have a difficult, unreasonable boss (or colleague)

More information

What To Look For When Revising

What To Look For When Revising What To Look For When Revising I love writing. But the revision process I can t exactly say the same about that. I don t mind it the first time I go back through my rough draft because it s still new and

More information

Adventures in Literature

Adventures in Literature The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick: An Historical Fiction Imagine losing everything you have ever known--your family, home, and friends. The only connection to your past is a broken machine,

More information

What tragedy occurs just as the young Frankenstein is to go to college? Global Incorrect Feedback The correct answer is: His mother dies.

What tragedy occurs just as the young Frankenstein is to go to college? Global Incorrect Feedback The correct answer is: His mother dies. Quiz: Comprehending the Reading Question 1a of 10 ( 1 Frankenstein, Part I 291726 ) World War I begins. His fiancée dies. Multiple What tragedy occurs just as the young Frankenstein is to go to college?

More information