- I love going to the beach.
- I’m afraid of clowns.
- I am named after my great grandmother Emiko.
- I hate cats.
- I’ve been swimming for most of my life.
- I’ll eat almost anything.
- My favorite color is blue.
- Both of my dogs are named after cartoon characters; Tommy from Rugrats and Winnie from Winnie the Pooh.
- My middle name is Nicole.
- I love to cut the grass.
- I love horses.
- I have been working with disabled children for almost four years.
- I love rap and pop music but I also love country.
- I hate to wear shoes outside in the summer.
- I love to run around in the rain.
- I’ll eat at any place that sells sushi; it’s my favorite food.
- I love scary things.
- I like to laugh.
- I am the clumsiest one out of all my friends, but I have never broken a bone in my body.
- My favorite color is blue.
- I love photography.
- I like to draw.
- My favorite subject is math.
- I have moved once and switched schools two times, not including high school.
- Even though I applied to other schools, I knew that I would go to JC.
Monday, May 23, 2011
25 Random Facts About Me
Emily Nicole Patrick
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Campbell- Character Profiles Group Assignment
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Questions:
Answers:
1. Campbell Alexander is the full name. He is Anna's lawyer for her trial.
2. He is about 34 years of age.
3. Campbell is a lawyer.
4. Personality traits: moody, likes money, know- it- all, greedy, doesn't like children, liar, serious.
5. Hobbies:
6. He always lies about his service dog; he gives a different answer for everyone who asks about why he has it.
7. Campbell used to be close to Julia so he probably knows a lot about her, but he is growing closer to Anna.
8. "It is exactly the kind of case I avoid like the Black Plague- one which requires far too much effort and client baby- sitting" (20). Campbell shows his early view of children and why he does not want to deal with this case.
9. He ended up working with his ex- girlfriend, and he has a service dog that know one knows the reason why.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Figurative Language in My Sister's Keeper
Simile: a figure of speech that expresses a resemblance between things of different kinds (usually formed with `like' or `as')
Metaphor:an analogy between two objects or ideas, conveyed by the use of a word instead of another
Simile:
1. "Actually, thats's not quite true- right now she doesn't have it, but it's hibernating under her skin like a bear, untill it decides to roar again" (10)
2. "Normal, in our house, is like a blanket too short for a bed" (11).
3. "It smells like the sweaty tongue of a hockey skate" (14).
4. "Instigating a lawsuit because your parents won't let you get birth control or go to an abortion clinic is like using a sledgehammer to kill a mosquito" (21)
5. "Anger glows around this kid like electricity" (21).
6. "Where your whole life stretches out ahead of you like a forked road" (21).
Metaphor:
1. "Lately, I have been having nightmare, where I'm cut into so many pieces that there isn't enough of me to be put back together" (13).
2. "My father says that a fire will burn itself out, unless you open a window and give it fuel. I suppose that's what I,m doing, when you get right down to it; but then again, my dad also says that when flames are licking at your heels you've hot to break a wall or two if you want to escape" (13).
3. "The room is a sea of dirty cloths and magazines and leftover Chinese take- out cartons" (14).
4. "Brian and I watch the doctors hover over Kate's feverish body, bees over a field of flowers, drawing what they can form her" (69).
5. "Her voice is a feather, a thread" (70).
6. "The saline pumps her up from the inside out, a baloon to be inflated" (70).
7. "My apartment, it is a work of art" (75).
Metaphor:an analogy between two objects or ideas, conveyed by the use of a word instead of another
Simile:
1. "Actually, thats's not quite true- right now she doesn't have it, but it's hibernating under her skin like a bear, untill it decides to roar again" (10)
2. "Normal, in our house, is like a blanket too short for a bed" (11).
3. "It smells like the sweaty tongue of a hockey skate" (14).
4. "Instigating a lawsuit because your parents won't let you get birth control or go to an abortion clinic is like using a sledgehammer to kill a mosquito" (21)
5. "Anger glows around this kid like electricity" (21).
6. "Where your whole life stretches out ahead of you like a forked road" (21).
Metaphor:
1. "Lately, I have been having nightmare, where I'm cut into so many pieces that there isn't enough of me to be put back together" (13).
2. "My father says that a fire will burn itself out, unless you open a window and give it fuel. I suppose that's what I,m doing, when you get right down to it; but then again, my dad also says that when flames are licking at your heels you've hot to break a wall or two if you want to escape" (13).
3. "The room is a sea of dirty cloths and magazines and leftover Chinese take- out cartons" (14).
4. "Brian and I watch the doctors hover over Kate's feverish body, bees over a field of flowers, drawing what they can form her" (69).
5. "Her voice is a feather, a thread" (70).
6. "The saline pumps her up from the inside out, a baloon to be inflated" (70).
7. "My apartment, it is a work of art" (75).
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
I am Someones Keeper
I am a keeper for my younger sister. When she has a bad day, I feel upset and know that I should do something to make her feel better. If she ever has problems with friends, I feel that it is my job to listen to her and give her advice on what to do. It helps that she is a good listener, and accepts my help. Even though we don't always get along perfectly, I know that I love her and that I will always be there for her. It is also good to know that she also has a way of being my keeper. Even though she is younger then me and sometimes we can't have the same conversations or shared feelings as we can with people our age, she is always there to talk and make me laugh. I am glad that I am lucky enough to have her in my life, and I hope that our relationship and friendship will last forever.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Introduction Blog: My Sister's Keeper
This novel by Jodi Picoult is about a girl who has cancer and her younger sister who is filing for the rights to her own body. Jodi Picoult was born on May 19, 1966, and she is an American author. She was awarded the New England Bookseller Award. She received this in 2003. Jodi was born in Long Island, and graduated from Harvard University. Jodi published her first book in 1992, and since then she has published over twelve novels.
I think that this novel will be very good. I have seen the movie, and I know that because it is both moving, and entertaining that I will enjoy it. This novel seems like it will be very worth while to read, and I can't wait to learn more about this story as I read!
Friday, April 15, 2011
Christopher McCandless Essay
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Imagine, going from place to place by hitchhiking, walking through Alaska, being able to face things, people, and places that you or no one you know will ever be able to face in their lifetime. This is what Christopher McCandless took on. Yes he knew it would be a risk, but he wanted to have the opportunity to be able to live his life to the fullest; to be able to do those things that we will never be able to, and to try to make it through alive. Sadly though, this was not the case. Chris died as a victim of starvation shortly after he had made it through his 100th day living in the wild; he was just twenty four years old. Chris was a hero to people who want to be able to live their lives to the fullest, and he was wrongly accused of being an amateur. Christopher McCandless was right about following his dreams and should not be negatively regarded because of some of the small mistakes he had made.
Gallien stated that, “Five feet seven or eight with a wiry build, he claimed to be 24 years old and said he was from South Dakota. He explained that he wanted a ride as far as the edge of Denali National Park, where he intended to walk deep into the bush and ‘live off the land for a few months’” (Krakauer, 4). This is how Chris is described at the beginning of his journey. He had the right to get
away from his family after all of the horrible things that he had to discover about them on his own. Chris had to find out that he was born from unmarried parents, and the worst part was that his father was still married to another woman. Walt’s ex-wife also had one more child with Walt, Chris’s father, before Walt divorced her to live with Chris’s mother, Billie. People, including Chris’s mother, may wonder why he decided to leave, but this probably played a large role in his decision.
Chris McCandless died of starvation. One of the main reasons that he starved and died so quickly was because of something he ate. Chris was eating a wild potato root that was non-toxic, but there was another plant that looked almost identical. When Chris became extremely sick from eating one of these plants, people found that, “It was easy to imagine Chris McCandless making the same mistake as the Indian woman and becoming similarly incapacitated” (192). People thought that he had made the mistake of eating the wrong plant. Krakauer sent in the seeds of the poisonous plant, Chris was eating seeds and not roots at that time which is why he only sent in the seeds, and they came back as non- toxic. This was very puzzling, but they finally found that Chris only got sick because of the mold on the seeds. Because the seeds were in a plastic bag, and the moisture was locked inside, the seeds grew a toxic mold. It was unfair of people to speak harshly about and scold him and believe he was some inexperienced, uneducated person when the people who thought of him this way didn’t even know that they were the ones who had made a mistake.
Chris was also wrongly accused of mistaking a moose for a caribou. Gordon Samuel said, “When I read in the paper that he thought he’d shot a moose, that told me right there that he wasn’t no Alaskan. There’s a big difference between a moose and a caribou. A real big difference. You’d have to be pretty stupid not to be able to tell them apart” (177). Krakauer thought that Samuel was right so he wrote in the article that Chris was wrong about the moose. This was basically siding with all of the people who thought Chris was unknowledgeable and unprepared. After receiving more hate mail, and thinking that Chris might have been what everyone was accusing him of, Krakauer found out something that was interesting. Chris was right. The animal that he had shot was definitely a moose. Once again, Chris was assumed to be incorrect. The people who thought that he was wrong probably didn’t take a second look at the animal in order to say that he was the one that didn’t know what he was talking about. Chris might have been wrong about other things, but he was right this time.
There are many people who thought that Chris was not and is not worthy of all this attention. Dermot Cole stated, “To sell the story, they’ve made it into a fable. He’s been glorified in death because he was unprepared” (Power, 3). This is not a correct statement. This book was not made into a fable. Chris was not as unprepared as people think. Yes, there were times when he made mistakes, but everyone makes mistakes; it ’s part of being human. He did have food and guns and other things. The only thing that Chris was not unprepared for was the river overflowing. If you look back in the book, when he goes to the river to try to cross, he still has a pretty good supply of food. It was after he ingested the moldy seeds that he became severly ill. Chris was not what people thought he was. The people who feel as though he knew nothing about what he was getting himself into are wrong because if he had only known that the river would overflow at the time that he was there, he most likely would have survived.
In conclusion, Chris was a hero. He showed people that it is right to follow your dreams and that you can work hard and try to achieve anything. People should not speak so negatively of him for doing what he has wanted to do. He achieved many things through this journey, and died a happy man. You, as the readers, should also read about Chris McCandless and spread the word about him. So remember to tell people his story and how brave and enthusiastic he was about being able to live the life of his dreams. Ending with the words of Alexander Supertramp, Chris McCandless, “Two years he walks the earth. No longer to be poisoned by civilization he flees, and walks alone upon the land to become lost in the wild” (Krakauer, 163).
Friday, April 8, 2011
Characterization of Christopher McCandless
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Direct and Indirect Characterization Notes on Christopher McCandless
(Alex Supertramp)
Chapter and page # | Description/quote from novel | What impression you get about Chris with this character trait or description? | |
Chapter 1, page 4 | “Five feet seven or eight with a wiry build, he claimed to be 24 years old and said he was from South Dakota. He explained that he wanted a ride as far as the edge of Denali National Park, where he intended to walk deep into the bush and ‘live off the land for a few month.’” | Chris is not physically fit for walking into such a dangerous environment. He seems a little crazy. | |
Chapter 1, Page 6 | Gallion offered to buy Chris some hunting gear because he thought that Chris was not well prepared, but Chris replied by saying, “No thanks anyway, I’ll be fine with what I’ve got.” | Chris seems to think that he knows what he is doing and seems a little cocky. He doesn’t want to take advice from anyone, and he doesn’t want anyone’s sympathy or anyone’s goods. | |
Chapter 2, Page 12 | People who are in the area of the bus spot the bus. They find a not on the outside that reads, “S.O.S. I need your help. I am injured, near death, and too weak to hike out of here. I am all alone, this is no joke.” | Chris, the once cocky, headstrong, and confident individual is now scared and begging for help. | |
Chapter 2, Page 14 | Starvation was found as the most likely cause of Chris’s death, and he had no identification so no one knew who he was or why he was there. | This shows that Chris didn’t pack himself enough food. He should have carried some form of identification, but he figured he would be okay. Chris was obviously not thinking correctly when he was preparing himself for his journey. | |
Chapter 3, Page 16 | “McCandless was smallish with the hard, stringy physique of an itinerant laborer.” | This shows that Chris wanted to work and do well at it. This shows that he wasn’t a physically big person, but he liked to show his strength and do his best. | |
Chapter 3, Page 18 | “You could tell right away that Alex was intelligent. He read a lot. Used a lot of big words.” | Chris is obviously intelligent, and he shows it to the people he meets. He may be trying to his identity, but not his personality. | |
Chapter 4, Page 29 | “McCandless documented the burning of his money and most of the events that followed in a journal- snapshot album.” | You can tell that if McCandless made it out of here alive, he wanted to remember his journey. He kept a diary and pictures to make sure he could remember and probably to be able to show it off to people. This was a major achievement for him. | |
Chapter 4, Page 34 | “It took McCandless most of three days to carry the canoe and his gear to the new canal.” | McCandless did not quit. He carried the canoe for three days, and he probably would have carried it longer if he needed to. He was very motivated, and didn’t surrender to challenges easily. | |
Chapter 5, Page 40 | “Curiously, when McCandless applied for the McDonald’s job, he presented himself as Chris McCandless.” | Chris also gave the restaurant his social security number. This describes Chris because it shows that he was very surprising at times. No one would’ve expected for him to do that, but he did which makes him so different. | |
Chapter 5, Page 42 | “Didn’t like to be around a lot of people, though. Temperamental.” | Chris was probably temperamental because of his family life. He had a bad life at home, and finally got away. He liked to travel by himself and be his own leader. | |
Chapter 6, Page 48 | “McCandless made an indelible impression on a number of people during his course of hegira.” | For this to have happened, Chris must have been a very kind person. He was obviously a good people person because no one that he visited really had many negative things to say about him. Sure he has some quirks here and there but overall he seemed like a very personable person. | |
Chapter 6, Page 51 | “Over the next few weeks McCandless and Franz spent a lot of time together.” | Even though McCandless didn’t want to become close with anyone, he let himself become close with Franz. He was offered to be adopted but avoided it and realized what he had let happen. He slipped out of Franz’s life easily and painlessly. | |
Chapter 7, Page 62 | “He definitely wasn’t what you’d call mechanically minded” | Even though Chris was smart, he didn’t know how to operate that much machinery. He knew things that you learned in school, but not things that he needed to know for some of the kinds of work ha was doing. | |
Chapter 7, Page 62 | “Nor was McCandless endowed with a surfeit of common sense.” | Chris was book smart but not as smart as we might think. He did not know certain things that you would expect any other normal person to know. | |
Chapter 10, Page 99 | “When he died, McCandless was wearing a blue sweatshirt printed with the logo of a Santa Barbara towing company; when contacted, the wrecking outfit professed to know nothing about him for how he’d acquired the shirt.” | Chris was mysterious and didn’t let people know about things. Also, if he was only wearing a sweatshirt than this shows that he was probably not properly dressed. | |
Chapter 10, Page 102 | “Chris almost always had short hair and was clean- shaven.” | Chris cared about his appearance. It shows that later in the book he did not shave and smelled bad so he simply must have stopped caring. | |
Chapter 11, Page 107 | “He was very to himself. He wasn’t antisocial- he always had friends, and everybody liked him- but he could go off and entertain himself for hours.” | This is probably why Chris was so looking forward to this journey. He likes to be independent. He was also very friendly with all of the people that he met, but he kept his distance. | |
Chapter 11, Page 109 | “…reached that 13,000- foot elevation. Chris wanted to keep going to the top. He was only twelve then, so all he could do was complain.” | Maybe this was why he was so glad to be on his own. No one could tell him to stop or that he couldn’t go any farther. You can also see that he was very adventurous from a young age. | |
Chapter 12, Page 119 | “… while Chris had made the dean’s list.” | Even though Chris did not like school at first and thought it was a pointless waste of money, he was a very smart person and after this he began to take interest in school. He mentioned that he would probably have good enough grades to get into Harvard. | |
Chapter 12, Page 122 | “Chris apparently judged artists and close friends by their work, not their life, yet he was temperamentally incapable of extending such lenity to this father.” | They found this strange because his father was such a successful man and Chris judged people by their work. He should have like Walt, but he didn’t. it was probably because of Chris’s home life and because he was around his father so much that Walt wasn’t really a close friends but more of an acquaintance. | |
Chapter 13, Page 128 | “In both photos Chris stares at the lens with the same pensive, recalcitrant squint, as if he’d been interrupted in the middle of an important thought and was annoyed to be wasting his time in front of the camera.” | It seems like he isn’t a happy child. He doesn’t want to be taking pictures, and he doesn’t care about leaving memories or being/ acting happy. | |
Chapter 13, Page 129 | “Like Chris, Carine is energetic and self- assured, a high achiever, quick to state an opinion.” | This shows a huge difference then when he was in the picture. We learn so much about him just by reading one sentence. We learn why it was that he got along with his sister so well and how he was in reality. How different he was from the Chris that we know. | |
Chapter 16, Page 164 | “McCandless told Gallien that he intended to remain on the move during his stay at the bush.” | Chris still wasn’t ready to settle down anywhere. He was always on the move, and wouldn’t let anyone stop him for tell him what to do. | |
Chapter 16, Page 167 | “I now wish I had never shot the moose. One of the greatest tragedies of my life.” | Chris did not like to kill animals, and inside he was a soft man. He didn’t like to waste food and felt terrible for this incident. | |
Chapter 17, Page 182 | “He had a need to test himself in ways, as he was fond of saying, “that mattered.” | He seems to need to prove himself. Average isn’t good enough. | |
Chapter 17, Page 183 | “He wrote about hardly anything but food.” | He was proud of having food when he had it, but when he was without it, he felt the need to share his suffering. | |
Chapter 18, Page 192 | “It was easy to imagine Chris McCandless making the same mistake as the Indian woman and becoming similarly incapacitated.” | People thought that he had made the mistake of eating the wrong plant. He only got sick because of the mold on it. It was unfair of people to mock and scold him and believe he was some inexperienced stupid person when they didn’t even know that they were the one who had made a mistake. | |
Chapter 18, Page 198 | “Recognizing the gravity of his predicament, he had abandoned the cocky moniker he’d been using for years, Alexander Supertramp, in favor of the name given to him at birth by his parents.” | In the end, he knew he was dying and decided to use his real name because he was in an actual state of emergency. He was scared, but still managed to try and safe and use the rest of his time wisely. | |
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