Friday, January 27, 2012

Reading Response Eon

   I just started reading this book called Eon by Alison Goodman. It reminds me a lot of the series Song of the lioness by Tamora Pierce. It is about how a girl with immense power is secretly training with the boys to become a fighter, something forbidden to women, them two becoming the first of their kind.
   Eon is really a 16 year old girl training with 12 yer old boys. She has the power to see all the dragons, without really training. she has raw power withing her, more than any Dragoneye has. Even though she is a cripple, she is much stronger than any of the boys that are nobles, she only a orphan that was sent to work at a salting mine. She proves everyone wrong, she even resurrecting the Mirror Dragon, who has been lost for 500 years.
   This book, as I said before, reminds me much of the series Song of the Lioness. Alanna Disguises herself as a boy. She becomes very good, even winning the kingdoms' approvals when her real identity is revealed. These two girls go against what society has laid out for them, saying that girls aren't strong enough to bear the arms of a man, but they go way beyond that, winning the approval and trust of a goddess. They both have the weight of an entire kingdom on their shoulders and even though they are told they can't do it, against many odds, they save the kingdom.
    I'm only making inferences since i have only read about one third of Eon and when the sequel hasn't even come out yet and comparing it to Song of the Lioness. I think Goodman based of her series of Tamora's writing style, making girls the fighters who go against the odds all the time. Even Pierce commented on Eon. I really like this book so far. I can't wait to finish it and for the sequel to come out already.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Social Issue Song Reflection

Writer: LENNON, JOHN

Imagine there's no heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people living for today

Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people living life in peace

You, you may say
I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one
I hope some day you'll join us
And the world will be as one

Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people sharing all the world

You, you may say
I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one
I hope some day you'll join us
And the world will live as one

This is one of my favorite songs. Whenever I hear it, I feel at peace. It really gets me thinking "what if the world was truly like this, what that be good or bad?" My sister also really likes this song, but she doesn't really understand the true meaning of it, even though I take the time to explain it to her, but she just says "So, what?" I still don't really want her to know what the world is truly like, yet. This song I think units those of all backgrounds and religions, giving them hope for a better future.

Racism Poem

Racism

Racism affects all

I make the racist comments

I am the racist comment

The color matters

My paleness earns me power

Mine gets me ignored

Speech

My annunciation is perfect that my voice is heavenly

My accent is so bad that I can't be understood

Background matters

I was here first

I just came here for a better life

This poem is about racism, how it can be shown everyday even though it can't really be noticed. It was kind of easy of telling the story from the immigrants point of view but I can't say the same for the one making the comments. It was kind of hard, since I kind of had to make things up, things I really didn't know about. But I think it came out pretty good. Sweat and blood gives of good results.

Favorite Blogs

My two favorite blogs are Sadie's and Brooke's. I really look their writing styles, how they are so creative, original and unique.
Sadie's blog is really descriptive. In her piece on Shakespeare, I really like how she "dumbed" down a piece from Hamlet. I did a Hamlet play, but simplified. Even I didn't understand it completely, at the level they wrote it. I agree with her when she says that sometimes Shakespeare characters might get a bit boring. Yeah they can get a bit dry and confusing, with all that "thou" and adding all those "th" suffixes. But still they way the characters talk it feels as if they are talking in a lost foreign language.
Brooke's blog is full of amazing books. She describes the whole book so well that I really want to read it, which is rare because I usually don't read recommend books. She desribes the realistic/historical fiction book so good, it makes you see how life can really be like.
These two bloggers have such awesome writing styles that I might even sometimes borrow them. Hehe!

Reading Response Revised "Cuba 15"



I can relate to Violet or also known as Violeta in many ways, not just because we are both Hispanic girls and trying to find who we are, but because of what makes us who we truly are. Violet and I both come from Hispanic backgrounds. We both have to carry on our families' traditions but at the same time find who we truly are, trying to fit into a place that is constantly changing, wanting to make something of ourselves, a person. Sometimes we got lost in a sea of doubt and confusion, but we somehow find a raft with reassurance and answers.
We have two sides to us, the family side and the "American" side. With our family we have to be the perfect little "niñita", obedient and normal, but with our friends we get to show our true colors, our true self, be who we want to be, no rules or restrictions to hold us back. Sometimes we wish we could only be one person, instead of always changing our masks all the time, but we know our family won't approve, that they'll be disappointed in us. We just do what we can to make them happy and proud of us, so they won't worry, so they won't say "why did she turn out that way?" or "what did we do wrong?".
Even though Violet and I are about year apart, we can truly understand each other, beyond family and friends, not even sisters or that older cousin, but as Hispanic, all American girls.



Reading Response "Under the Persimmon Tree"

I never knew this book was going to be so deep when I read the blurb. When I told myself to read more realistic/historical fiction, I never imagined it would be so depressing. This book shows what true loss is, not just death, but loss of home, faith, but most importantly, identity.
The main characters, Najmah (Star) a Muslim by birth and Elaine (Nusrat) a Muslim by conversion. Najmah losses her family in a raid about a month after the WTC fell down, now must make something of herself and embarks on a long difficult journey to look for her father and bother who might just have survived. The story of Nusrat is entirely different,nothing that you would imagine it to be. Born American, she has always needed answers to questions that none could answer, but she found answers and comfort in Islam, something she had never truly had. She marries a Afghan doctor and moves with him back to Afghanistan. Shortly afterward he goes to Pakistan and sets up a clinic. Then shortly afterward a bomb is dropped on the village and he is killed, but news of this doesn't reach Nusrat for a really long time of the incident. Both women try to find themselves while clinging desperately onto a slight slimmer of hope.
These meet by fate. Nusrat runs a refugee school and Najmah is delivered to her. Nusrat helps her break her silence and the two find peace and hope in each other. The two become their new family.

Reading Response "Habibi"

I absolutely love this book! It is a graphic novel by Craig Thompson. This book tells of one if the greatest love stories ever. It takes place in a land full of poverty, where to live is a simple struggle to overcome each day. The main character, Dodola, shows something that is hard to become no matter what the age, a mother. She makes a life with a young child she rescues which a she later names Zam out of nothing, just the desert. The pair learn to survive while at the same living a simple but grateful life, even sometimes they are on the brink of starvation. Dodola teaches Zam what is truly wonderful and important in life by teaching him the teachings of Islam. The author makes this easier for the readers to understand by intertwining it with the teachings of Christianity in a such a exquisite way that it leaves us hungry for more, wanting to so how deep Christianity, Judaism, Islam go together. This book keeps on asking ourselves how deep is our faith and for what we were put here to do, what does God intend for us to do with ourselves, why are we even alive, how did this all come to be; the universe, how does science and math all tie into our lives, especially religion? I believe that one of the reasons Thompson wrote this book was to make ourselves ask these questions we barely think about. Well it definitely worked on me. I now feel as if I know myself better.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Reading Response "Cuba 15"

   I can relate to Violet or also known as Violeta in many ways, not just because we are both Hispanic girls and trying to find who we are, but because of what makes us who we truly are.   Violet and I both come from Hispanic backgrounds. We both have to carry on our families' traditions but at the same time find who we truly are, trying to fit into a place that is constantly changing, wanting to make something of ourselves, a person.
   We have two sides to us, the family side and the "American" side. With our family we have to be the perfect little "niñita", obediant and normal, but with our friends we get to show our true colors, our true self, be who we want to be, no rules or restrictions to hold us back.
   Even though Violet and I are about  year apart, we can truly understand each other, beyond family and friends, but as Hispanic, all American girls.

Reading Response "The Glass Castle"

   I absolutley love the book The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls. It shows something most people wouldn't even, no wouldn't even bother to think of. It shows the true side of America "the Beautiful".
   When people think of America, they think of everything being perfect. Seldom do others think of the places that seem as if they were third-world countries. This book shows these places from a child that is growing in them point of view. Jeannette, the main character tries to make something of herself in these awful places, to not carry on who her father is; lazy, a drunkard, uncaring.
   Jeannette grows up in challenging places, where you have to do your most to survive, where you have to fight to simply live. But she does everything she can to change herself, to not turn into those that live in those horrid places, those that are cold hearted and unemotional. She wants to become succesfull, not poor, powerful, not weak.
   This book gives you many things to think about, especially that not everything is not what it seems, especially big, huge things.

Reading Response "Tiger's Curse"

   In the book Tiger's Curse by Colleen Houck it captivated me just a few chapters in. I really like how this book ties in Hindu culture into modern romance. But I couldn't help but notice that the main character Kelsey is a bit like Bella from Twilight, someone that I sometimes find very annoying.    Kelsey is trying to find who she truly is after her parents died. She works at a circus where she meets Ren, an 300-year old prince from ancient India who is put under a curse, forced to take the body of a tiger. When Kelsey frees him, they both embark on a mythical journey to free him of his burden. The two can't help but fall in love with each other, forming an unbreakable bond that no matter what can never be cut.
  Bella also has an unbreakable tie with Edward, they just love each other to all ends. These couples' undying love for each other is both a blessing and a burden. Sometimes it helps them and sometimes it just blocks them. Love can be a great burden to all, especially with a boyfriend that is sometimes that was thought that can only come myths. Sometimes the girls hold them back and sometimes just don't know when to simply let go.
  Love is something that should not be treated lightly. You should treat it frailly and nuture it with care, tend to it with care to make sure nothing goes out of place. Love is something wonderful.

Reading Response "A Wrinkle in Time"

   In the book A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle, I can realte to the main character Meg. She is the kind of character that gets upset quickly, that is very impatient, and very loving and caring.   We both get upset quickly, especially very angry real quick. Sometimes our anger leads us to act without really thinking, our emotions getting the better of us. We both get upset over little unimportant things, things that are so small that sometimes they are even noticed, but we make a whole big fuss over them, making them into these huge problems.
   We are really impatient. We always race ahead of others, not really looking into the future and seeing what would really happen if we considered the options we had. This fault leads to mistakes we make, but for some reason that doesn't slow our rapid pace. We don't really learn from those mistakes, even though we are supposed to.
   Even though we may not look it, we are both very loving and caring. We express this in different ways, ways that aren't very noticeable. We have our own styes of expressing these very strong emotions, we just display them differently. We both have a motherly instinct that we can't help but follow, looking out for our siblings first before ourselves.
   Even though Meg and I are similar in some ways, that doesn't mean we are exactly the same person. It's not just our emotions that make us who we are, but our soul.