Thursday, February 13, 2014

Post 9: Characters


In my opinion, the narrator of the Lone Survivor is a very likable character.  His name is Marcus Luttrell, and he is a former Navy Seal.  He is a very passionate man; he cares about his duty to our country more than anything else.  Luttrell is part of the most elite combat force in the world.  Seals are highly trained warriors and are feared by opposing forces all around the world.  Luttrell is likable because of the attitude he has towards our country.  He is willing to risk his life and put it all on the line for the U.S. 

                I believe that there is a connection between the narrator and its genre fiction.  Lone Survivor is a non-fiction book.  Marcus Luttrell has a lot of personal stories that he tells throughout the book.  Many of his shared experiences are from his childhood, growing up in Texas.  They’re about his passion for wanting to be a Seal since he was twelve years old.  He also talks about experiences he’s had with his former Seal partners.  Experiences that involve real life combat scenarios.  Many of his combat stories are from actual events that have occurred throughout the world, and can be backed up by real and factual evidence.  Luttrell’s novel connects to its non-fiction genre because of his genuine and authentic personality.  Some of the quotes he shares from the time he served are encrypted into the Seal’s heads.  These are authentic actions that are portrayed by actual U.S. soldiers.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Post 8: Truth In Memoir


Memoir- a record of events written by a person having intimate knowledge of them and based on personal observation.  I do not believe that a memoir has to be completely true.  Nowhere in this definition does it mention a memoir containing factual evidence of the events occurred.  Therefore, if the story is somewhat stretched, it shouldn’t be declassified as a memoir. 

The last part of the sentence states that a memoir is based off of personal observation.  The writing piece is seen through the eyes of the writer.  The writer perceives the events in their own unique way.   The reader doesn’t have the right to know if the writer’s perception was wrong, it shouldn’t matter.  The story does not change. 

I believe there should be a point in a non-fiction book where it is fully backed up with evidence.  Mr. Coates’ example was with a medical book.  You want that knowledge to be fully backed up, or else a possible operation might go terribly wrong.  If there is no label on that medical book as non-fiction, then some bum of a writer might make a bs medical book, just to make some money.  That is where the line should be drawn; if it effects the life of another. 

Monday, January 27, 2014

Post 7: Book Trailer

I Am Number Four book trailer:
http://youtu.be/etm0W92GGKk

Post 6: Readicide


I believe that Readicide is a huge problem in our schools today.  Children are growing up reading old time literature that is assigned to them that they have to read.  Kids are being forced to read and heavily analyze books that they have no interest in.

 While most of the school assigned books that are of literary fiction, we should be reading more genre fiction.  The books assigned for kids should be modern, new books that they actually have an interest in.  For example: a sixteen year old girl would much rather read The Hunger Games instead of Macbeth.  The students have a bad attitude towards the book before they read the first page. 

The language in older books is also much harder to comprehend and needs to be heavily analyzed.  Odds are that the student will spark note the entire book and still pass the given test.  I agree that a school’s reading list should include a fifty-fifty split with literary fiction and genre fiction.  I do believe that some famous older books should be read, but at the same time that shouldn’t be the only types of books we read.  If the reading has zero interest in the students, they will only turn to spark notes and won’t read a page of the book itself.  I know that from experience; I am guilty of spark noting an assigned book and I know that about half of my peers are as well. 

It is important that kids read books while they are in school.  Kids need to explore all the different types of literature and styles of writing.  They need to form their own opinions, not just the same opinion that most students have, which is “I hate reading”.  That seems to be the only opinion you hear from kids now a days. 

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Post 5: Adapting My Book


The following are scenes found in the book that are necessary to keep when adapting the story into a movie.

One scene that would be essential to bring to the big screen would be John and Henri up and leaving their Florida home at the beginning of the book.   John was getting notified that number three was just killed, because of the scar forming on his ankle.  He had to leave his friends and his house that very moment.  I think this scene is important because it shows the lifestyle that John lives.  It shows that if need be, he will pack up the little belongings he has, leave his house, and start a new life, all at a moment’s notice. 

Another scene that would be crucial for the movie is when John receives his first legacy at school.  He is in the middle of class on his first day, and his hands start to glow and become very hot.  He locks himself in a classroom and waits for Henri to pick him up.  This is important because his first legacy is a big stepping stone for him and he has been waiting for it his whole life.  It is also important to show how his legacy arrives.  It doesn’t just come to him instantly, it comes through a process. 

The scene where John and Henri are talking to Sam about different alien conspiracies is very important.  Sam brings up the story of the Mogadorian’s quest for universal control; John and Henri’s situation.  Sam somehow read about it in a sketchy magazine subscription.  This means trouble for John and Henri because it shows that the Mogadorians are close and that the people on earth know about it. 

These next two aspects of the book are unnecessary to the plot and could be done without.

A scene that could be unnecessary for the movie is when Sam points a gun at john point blank.  John walked into Sam’s bedroom and said hi.  Immediately, Sam pulled a gun out of his desk drawer and pointed it at John.  After a short conversation, Sam put the gun down and they hung out for the rest of the night.  I thought that moment was just irrelevant and quickly forgotten about. 

A minor character that isn’t too important would be little Bernie Kosar.  He is a little dog that follows John around and randomly showed up to his school one day.  He is a very obedient dog and goes everywhere with John.  Since I am only half way done with the book, I don’t know of any impact Bernie has on the plot just yet, if there even is any.  But as of now where I am in the book, he serves no purpose.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Post 4: Book Project

The fan experience that will be provided for the readers of The Shack, is a business dedicated to customizing your own garden fractal.  This business would have the customer choose different types of floral arrangements that fit their personalities and desires.  A specialized worker will then show up to the customer’s house and produce the garden fractal.  It will be a garden that represents you and will make you feel like it is a part of yourself. Every garden will be unique in its own way, and will be a beautiful and perfect mess for whoever invests in one.

In The Shack, there is a scene where Mack is helping out Sarayu with some garden work.  The garden is filled with a bunch of random flowers of all sorts of color and sizes.  To Mack, it looks a mess.  “It was chaos in color”.  The flowers are arranged with no pattern.  Vegetables and herbs were randomly dispersed throughout the garden.  Sarayu tells Mack, “It’s a fractal from above”.  The book states its definition of a fractal.  “A fractal… something considered simple and orderly that is actually composed of repeated patterns no matter how magnified.  A fractal is almost infinitely complex”.  You can tell that Sarayu is very fond of this garden.  She takes very good care of it and has a passionate love for the garden.   After some hard work in the garden, Sarayu reveals to Mack that the garden is actually him.  The garden is Mack’s soul.  As they are working on beautifying the garden, they are actually beautifying his soul.  They are strengthening his beliefs and helping his relationship with God grow stronger.  The character and uniqueness of the garden are represented in his soul.  So the business I have created does just as Sarayu has done with Mack.  The business will customize your very own garden fractal.  The characteristics will be based on your very own personal characteristics.  However you want it to look.  The garden made will represent YOUR soul.  It will contain all of your favorite colors and shapes and it will be arranged just how you want it.  It will be your job to keep up the garden and maintain it.  The reason for that is so it reminds you that your own soul needs to kept up and nurtured.  Mack was really drawn to his garden and was fascinated by it, before he knew it was his soul.  He was almost familiar with it, like he had seen it before.  That is what the garden fractal business wants you to feel after purchasing your garden.  You will feel connected to your garden; you will feel like it is a part of you.

I think this idea will work with my book because it relates to the part of the book that may be the most impactful.  This part of the book stood out to me the most.  It was the big “ah ha” moment for Mack, and really helped him understand and strengthen his relationship with God.  This service will broaden the audience for the book because as people see the beautiful garden fractal, it will make them want to read The Shack and understand what the garden is all about.  I mean, how could you not want to read the book after seeing such fascinating garden? The garden itself will draw lots of attention to whoever owns it.  This business will keep readers involved with the book because they can always be updating or purchasing new gardens for themselves. 

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Post 2: What is a book?


A book has a life of its own.   It speaks to your inner being, like nothing else can.  It reaches your soul through a variety of emotions and events that conjure your thoughts in a unique way.  It surprises you; a book can eliminate your expectations completely.  It affects every reader in a different manner, depending on their judgment of the book.  It can take you to places you have never been.  A book can take you on a trek through the pacific, or to a romantic love scene in the 15th century.  In a way, a book is your own personal tour guide.  It shows you its marvelous features, but allows you to see them in whatever way you desire.  The book itself is a blank canvas.  It creates an image in your mind as you read, and the more you read, the better the painting becomes.  Words are merely a map, a set of directions that can take you to the edge of the universe and beyond.

A book is not a three by four inch screen.  A page is to be flipped, not swiped.  The thickness of a book allows you to feel the depth with your fingertips, unlike a cold, lifeless cellular device that is there to only distract you.  A book has memory.  It contains scratches on the binding, or wrinkles on page created by a simple tear drop from a previous reader.  If you get tear drops on a phone screen, the guy from Apple will simply tell you that there’s water damage.  A book does not have a battery.  Its light cannot simply go out, due to over usage.  A book can never be overused.  It gains value the longer it sits on the book shelf in your head.