Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Book Report 3

Tiger Eyes

Davey Wexler is the main character in the book Tiger Eyes. She is a 15 year old girl. She has light brown eyes and wavy brown hair.  She has a laid back and "go with the flow" type of personality.  Davey helps keep things running smoothly in her house.
Davey's mother is Gwen and her father is Adam. Davey has a younger brother Jason and  a boyfriend named Hugh . Along with her family members,  Davey has a cat named Minka. Davey and her family live in the town of Atlantic City on the southeast coast of the United States. Her house is located above the grocery store which her family owns.
One day her father was shot in a robbery at their grocery store. At the time of the shooting, her mother was out with Jason. Davey and her boyfriend were the only ones home. Unfortunately, Davey's father's injuries were fatal and he died in her arms. Ever since her father's death, Davey has become a paranoid person who cannot get over the flashback images of her father's tragic death.  She even wishes her family could move out of her home to escape the memories.
One day Davey's Aunt Bitsy and Uncle Walter approach her mother and insist that she and her family come to live with them in New Mexico.  Davey's mom decides that that would be the best thing for her family,  so they go to live with her aunt and uncle. But, Davey becomes more uptight, demanding, and less relaxed around her family. She never wants to do anything with them, always has to have things her way, and it seems as though everything is changing for the bad. So, Davey spends more and more time by herself and likes to go to the canyon to think.
One day while at the canyon, Davey meets a guy who introduces himself as Wolf. He addresses her with the name "Tiger" because she has the eyes of a tiger. wolf and Davey get to know each other as they begin to meet routinely at the canyon. Wolf understands Davey and her feelings because he is going through most of the same experiences with his dad who is dying of cancer. They become friends and Davey learns to trust someone again.
 After some time passes, Davey is also willing to listen to her uncle's advice. He tells her that it might be helpful for her to deal with her father's death by volunteering to work at the Los Alamos Medical Center. Davey decides to give it a try and applies to be a  volunteer. Because her uncle is an employee of the hospital, she gets a job as a volunteer. She begins volunteering on a regular basis, and then, one day she meets a patient named Mr. Ortiz who is dying of cancer. Davey and Mr. Ortiz seem to have some kind of connection, so she visits him every day. While volunteering she discovers that Wolf is Mr. Ortiz's son. Between the development of her relationships with Mr. Ortiz and Wolf, Davey begins to relax, and returns to her original personality. Davey starts to laugh more, have a better outlook on life, and begins to open up to others more. Everything seems to be going great until the day she comes to visit Mr. Ortiz and his room is empty. Not only does she learn that Mr. Ortiz has died, but that her best friend, Wolf, will soon be leaving. Wolf explains to Davey that before his dad became ill, he had been away at school. Now that his father was no longer in need of his assistance and support, he would need to return to college to finish his education. Davey is devastated.
Through Davey's feelings of loss and devastation, she is reminded of the expression that her father used to say to her. He would tell her to always remember that "once one door closes another one is opened."  So the door is opened and Davey's life takes a new turn, she is able to let go of her pain and return with her family to their hometown. They move into a new apartment with a beautiful ocean view.  As the days pass back in Atlantic City, Davey returns to her normal self.  She finds her old  "happy, go lucky" personality and begins spending time again with her boyfriend, Hugh.

I absolutely loved the book Tiger Eyes! I really got into this story because it was about a teenage girl around my age.  I found it easy to relate to because I could see myself as the main character at times. I could feel happy when she was happy and sad when she was sad. I could understand the book very easily because the author used very descriptive words and I thought it was written at a good level for me. I enjoyed the book because the plot line was fast paced. It only stays on a subject long enough to get the point across then it moves on to the next section.
My favorite part in this book was when Davey learned that Mr. Ortiz was Wolf’s father. In the story I learned that these two characters were related, and it was a surprise to me.  I was not expecting those two characters to be related so, I thought it added some interest and excitement to the book. I also liked this section of the book because it's the turning point in the main character's personality development. I also liked this part because it has a happy ending.
I would strongly recommend the book Tiger Eyes to any teenage girl that likes fictional stories about relationships, personal problems, inner feelings, and thoughts. In this book the main character is a young teenage girl named Davey who is dealing with these types of issues. Her problems are moving away from her hometown, her dad dying, and her best friend moving away. Davey’s feelings move from one extreme to the other. At times, she is a really joyful, excited, happy, caring, and loving person and at other times she is scared, mad, paranoid, and even a nasty person. Her thoughts and feelings move and change by  what’s happening to her family and by what road blocks life brings to her on the way. She also struggles with why it seems as though everything is going wrong only in her life. These are the things that make the character interesting and the story eventful.
Even though there are teenage boys and adult males in this story, I would not recommend this book to most of the guys my age because it focuses so much on a girls perspective.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Book Report 2

Last Song
      The main character in the story is Veronica Miller, but everybody calls her Ronnie. Ronnie is a 17 year old girl with long brown hair and a purple streak. She has brown eyes and a petite, lean body. Most of the time, she is described wearing jeans and casual clothes. She is also a vegetarian because of her love for animals.
            In the beginning of the book The Last Song, the author, Nicholas Sparks, describes Ronnie as a talented musician.  Then he explains how she has played piano at Carnegie Hall and been invited to attend school at Juilliard. He also writes how she refuses to play or let anyone know of her talent. Ronnie is living with her mother and her brother Jonah in Manhattan, New York, but her mom decides it would be best for them to go live with their dad for the summer. Ronnie's dad is Steve, a musician who also plays piano. He currently lives in Wrightsville, North Carolina where he writes music and works in the church he grew up in.        
             In the book The Last Song, Ronnie's personality changes greatly. She goes from being an angry and self absorbed person to a loving, caring, and an admirable individual. In the beginning of the story, Ronnie is basically pissed at the world and everyone in it. She is mad because her parents divorced and her father moved away. Ronnie acts out and becomes a bit of a trouble maker. She is difficult for her mom to handle because she acts disrespectful towards her and she often lies about where she is.  She begins to skip school and her grades start dropping.  Ronnie begins to wear dark clothes and heavy makeup, and she starts hanging out with, as her mom describes, "the wrong crowd."
            When Ronnie's mom takes her to live with her dad, she doesn't want to talk to him or be near him. She doesn't want to listen to anything he has to say to her, and she doesn't like anything he tries to do for her.  She doesn't really want to spend time with either of her parents. Really, the only person she is somewhat nice to is her younger brother, Jonah.
            Ronnie's personality starts to change when she meets and begins to fall in love with a guy named Will Blakelee. Although at first their relationship has its ups and downs, Ronnie learns to care about someone other than herself. Will makes Ronnie happy and at ease with the world. Together Ronnie and Will even protect a sea turtle nest from raccoons so that the sea turtle babies can survive. As Ronnie's world begins to improve, she begins to forgive her father and is able to talk and reconnect with him.
             After Ronnie and her dad have made amends, Ronnie finds out that her dad has stomach and pancreatic cancer and will not live much longer. So Ronnie puts her relationship with Will and her personal struggles aside to spend most of her time with her dad and Jonah. Then she dedicates herself to taking care of her father, and in the process, is able to rebuild her bond with her mother. While Ronnie's time is spent caring for her dad, she encourages Jonah and Will to finish the stain glass window that her father and Jonah had been working on all summer. In her pain and in her healing process, Ronnie also finishes the song that her dad had been struggling to finish. This becomes the real turning point in Ronnie's character which leads to more life changing experiences.
            To find out what becomes of Ronnie, you have to read The Last Song.

             The Last Song is a heart wrenching story of how a young girl's life experiences with family relationships, peer relationships, and tragedy change how she views people.
            Because Ronnie is angry about the break up of her parents, in the beginning of the story, she tends to see people for how they appear on the outside and by her first impression of them. But what she experiences over the period of 3 short months changes how she sees them.
            At the beginning of the summer of her seventeenth year, Ronnie moves to a new home with her father and meets several new people her own age. The first person Ronnie meets is a girl named Galadriel, but most people know her as Blaze. When Blaze and Ronnie first met Blaze was wearing all black and had many body piercings. Her hair was raggedy and uncombed. Blaze had dark heavy make up which made her look gothic. Despite Blaze’s hardened look, Ronnie seemed to relate to her individualism, and as a result they became friends. Both Ronnie and Blaze seemed to be happy as loners. Ronnie soon learns Blaze isn’t a loner; she clings to her boyfriend Marcus. She will do anything to impress him and keep him interested in her. Blaze will even lie and steel for him. For example, one day while Blaze and Ronnie are shopping together, Blaze sneaks a bracelet into Ronnie’s purse to make it look like she shoplifts because Blaze believes that Marcuse likes Ronnie more. As a result, Blaze’s and Ronnie’s friendship falls apart. Later Blaze is severely burned and hospitalized. Marcus is not there for her and Ronnie feels bad. This tragic event and the fact that Ronnie felt bad for Blaze, causes Blaze to apologize and confess to the shoplifting incident. Ronnie Gains a new understanding for Blaze’s need for acceptance, love, and friendship.
            Through the relationship between Blaze and Ronnie, Ronnie is introduced to Marcus. Marcus first appears to be cool, talented, and confident. But, the more time Ronnie spends with Marcus she discovers he is unkind, manipulative, and controlling. Marcus turns out to be a bad influence on Blaze, and he has no conscious; he can trick people into doing anything for him.
            Not only is Ronnie introduced to Marcus, but she also meets a guy named Will. Ronnie first runs into Will at a beach volleyball game. Will is playing volleyball and Ronnie runs into him. She is angered by his careless action and thinks he is a cocky and self-centered jock. She is quick to judge him by his looks and the popular group he’s surrounded by. As the story goes on Ronnie learns Will as a caring, kind, and loveable human being. Will helps her take care of her brother, renews her relationship with her dad, and helps her let go of her anger.
            Ronnie’s perception of others is not only changed by her peers it is also influenced by her father. When Ronnie first comes to live with her father she is angry, resentful, and unwilling to get to know him. But her father is unfortunately dying because he is suffering with cancer. As they begin to renew their family relationship Ronnie learns that her father was diagnosed with cancer and with holding this information from her because he didn’t want her to just feel sorry for him. Ronnie then sees him for who he is, a loving and caring father who would do anything for his children.
            These are some of the example of how Ronnie’s interpretation of others was misguided.