“What I Learned”
David’s parents always wanted him to go to Princeton University and become very successful. He would always say to his dad that he would be studying patricide and his mother would then get jealous and say; “Why not matricide?” He was accepted to Princeton, but was not sure in what program he wanted to do. History was too difficult as he always mixed up dates and eras. David had finally found a subject that interested him it was comparative literature. His parents were disappointed with his choice and thought it would not get him anywhere. That was the case at first when he came back home, where he had to complete his laundry for six months. David had nothing and his parents were not impressed, since he went to an Ivy League University and all. He then decided to move out of the house and to the city in New York. One thing that cheered him up was an alumni reunion where it was not just David who was unemployed, but most of the graduates were in the same boat. Finding work, would not be too difficult, however it was a job as a rat catcher. As days went on, he began to write about his day and the events that happened. When returning home, David’s room had been taken over by the new dog and found that a pet had replaced him.
“That’s Amore”
Hugh and David lived in an apartment in New York on Thompson Street, fall of 1991. Across the hall was Helen, an older woman who lived alone and was very loud. She would always listen to the radio, and only on one station for the whole day. That played classics from Tony Bennett and her favorite song was “That’s Amore”. Not only was she loud but also she was very opinionated, rude and thrived off getting people in trouble. David was the only one who really took care of her, and would always make him feel guilty about things. For example, not picking up the right medication at the pharmacy or not cooking the right food. While listening to the radio, Helen would spy on neighbors in the apartment’s courtyard and tell the super intendment of anything-suspicious going on. Helen was an important character in David’s life as she was a mother figure to him at that time. Even though Helen might not of been the nicest of people, she was an interesting person in this novel.
“In time I completed an entire book, which was subsequently published. I presented a first edition to my parents, who started with the story about our neighbor’s well, and then got up close the drapes. Fifty pages later, they were boarding up the door and looking for ways to disguise themselves.” This is such a humorous passage, because you can just imagine, his parents reading the book quietly and then look at each other worried and find all these ways to hide themselves.
Imagery was an easy thing to grasp from the “That’s Amore” chapter, I could just imagine how Helen would of looked sitting in her chair and watching all the neighbors from her window. Diction was fairly simple and easy to understand. The structure was good, from a transition of David’s parents being disappointed in him, to the next chapter being mainly the same thing, a character that made him feel guilty.
Monday, October 12, 2009
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