Thursday, December 20, 2007

blog2 max the might

There is alot of conflict in max the might.Worm go home one day and max show up at her house and he standing out side looking into the window.Max see the worm dad aka the undertaker they call him.Worm dad is trying to run away with worm and take her from her mom.so then max see that so max knocks down the door and take worm away so then the dad calls the cops on max and tells the cops that max broke into there house and took worm.So now the cops are on the look out for max.CORY MOSER

blog 5

The motivation of Max is to just suruive. To get through everyday. To prove to himslf that he's got purpose. That he's not a loser. That because his Dad is in jail don't mean he's bad or to be feared.

blog 4

The characters in the story do evolve. The fact that they know each other causes changes Maxwell was a quiet child with a learning disabitity who didn't have friends. Freak, a small, extremely bright, handicaped child who didn't have any friends. Max learns from freak, to read and about friendship. Freak learns about true friendship and that brains aren't everything.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

blog response 2

In the novel i am reading there are two main characters that really stick out.But even though they are very different from me, in ways they seem really similiar to me too.The character in the novel that is most similiar to me is the older sibling named Lynn Takeshima. Lynn is a Chinese-American girl who watchaes over her younger sister Katie. Throughout growing up Katie gives good advice and occasionally has to try her best to lead Katie in the right direction . In one incident when they were both very young Lynn saved her sister from a volatile dog that was attacking her. I can relate to her because I have a little brother who i have to watch constantly so he tends to really grasp hold of my advice and depend on me alot.

blog 3

For the character maxwell, I think the song Eye of the tiger would be a good theme song. I the song, it talks about how they would battle and overcome whatever obsicale they may run into. It tells about a persons belief in themself and their ability to come out on top.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

blog 2

I can identify with maxwell a.k.a kicker. He's a kid who has issues. He's embarrassed by his family. He's tall so he feels akward. He's told by evenyone he resembles his father. In his eyes this is an insult. His Dad is in jail and everyone was afrand of him. So he feels people don't like him because of this.
I also identify with Freak. He's short, and on crutches. He don't always fit in. He kind of makes people uncomfortable. He don't care if he's liked. He wants friends who like him for who he is. What he lacks in height he makes up for with brans.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

1st blog max the might

I am reading max the might By Rodman Philbrick and I think its a really good book so far.If you read the 1st book I think you would like the 2nd book.Max meets this girl on the streets and she was getting picked on.So then max go over to her and helps her out.He asked her name an she said people call me worm.They call her worm because she allways reading a book.Well they meet up agn and worm mom see max with worm and tell her to get away from her and she give him something before she left.CORY MOSER

Monday, December 10, 2007

Let's Go Dudes

We have a lot of blogging to do. Let's get ourselves caught up.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

"Freak the Mighty" , By Rodman Philbrick peg 1-14
Maxwell is liveing in his gram and grim basement. His best frind of kinder grein. That call him Freak but his real name is kiven. Max look out sind and see kiven trying to crim up in a tree to git his bird-thing out of the tree for freak.



William Szczupak per 9

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Into the Wild, Jon Krakauer Pages: 1-144

So, the book I'm reading is about this early twenty something kid who
is pretty alienated. It's a nonfiction book, and since I haven't
summed it up yet in a previous response, it's about a kid who is
searching for meaning in life and seeks this meaning by exploring.
At the beginning of the book we find out that he ends up dying in the
middle of Alaska to exposure.

Even though I think I'm supposed to, I'm having a really hard time
identifying with the main character, Chris McCandless. I look at
the cover and there's this picture of Emile Hirsch portraying
McCandless. He's a good looking kid, and he's kind of sitting in this
"top of the world" type dominant pose. The author seems to really
identify with the character, and spends a couple of chapters relating
his own similar experiences. And McCandless is seemingly the rugged,
individualistic antihero that Americans celebrate.

But, I can't get into him, and I think it's because I'm a parent
now. I see the way this kid abandoned his parents, went off into the
middle of nowhere, took chances, didn't write home, and espoused his
theories on the way life works to whomever would listen, and I'm
like, "dude...call your mom, dad and sister. They're worried sick."
The kid is kind of portrayed as this spiritual, deep Thoreau quoting
prophetic figure, but he just strikes me as naive and self centered.
I don't know what I'd do if I was his parent. I would be devastated
if my son took off after graduating college and just disappeared.
It's really rather sad.

(By the way, if you're wondering, this response is to the 7th bullet
under character. The total length of this response is 279 words. I
summed up the book to start because I figured you'd need that
information, but then I really tried to stick to talking about
whether or not I identified with the main character and why.)