Thursday, November 20, 2014

Street Lawyer

In the beginning chapters of The Street Lawyer,  a homeless man takes eight lawyers, including the protagonist Mike, hostage in a law firm. During the hostage situation, Mike concludes that the Homeless man, called Mister by the captives, has no intent on killing anyone. After several hours police manage to take out Mister and rescue the hostages. Mike returns home to his wife, who they do not have the strongest of marriages between them. After rethinking of the actions he was in and the condition of the homeless in D.C., Mike leaves his firm to help represent the homeless. He does this because he feels that the homeless are helpless and need someone to help them in cases and problems. Mike almost feels like he is doing this not because he feels guilty for the luxurious life he has lived, but almost like it his responsibility to help the homeless.


Mike had changed after the hostage situation will change his life and career. He leaves a successful, well paid job (which he had admitted that he was not really fond of) and enters the life of helping homeless in their time of needs.  He takes his experience and talents from his previous lawyer career and takes it to the street. With Mordecai Green, another social worker who represents homeless, they take care of people in shelters and soup kitchens. Mordecai has been helping the homeless longer then Mike has, but gladly helps Mike with the swing of things.

The Samaritan

A Samaritan is someone who helps another under any circumstance, and goes out of his way to help someone in need. Samaritans are rare today, but there still are people who care enough to assist others.  In the stories "And of Clay Are We Created" and "A State Championship Versus Runner's Conscience", the main character brings aid to someone who is in trouble. These stories inspire us to become more and more like Samaritans so that we may have a chance to help someone in need. In "And of Clay Are We Created", news reporter Rolf Carle covers a volcano eruption that takes place in Columbia. When arriving at one of the many villages impacted by the natural disaster, he come across a girl stuck waist deep in clay, named Azucena. He tries to pull her free but she is too far deep. He assists her by giving her food and comfort by not leaving her alone for days. However, she becomes weaker and weaker and eventually they have to let go of her. Though Azucena dies, Rolf Carle provided care and comfort to her in her last days. This is one of the strongest examples of someone who is a good Samaritan.

In the real world, examples of people being good Samaritan happens almost everyday without being noticed by others, especially in the military. Men and women alike in service risk their lives on a daily basis to help defend their nation and their fellow comrades. In 2007, U.S. forces occupy a small farming village in Afghanistan. Corporal Steven Miles was a marine sniper stationed there. When his squad came under fire, Miles became wounded as a round hit his left shoulder. Though injured, Miles saw a 13 year old Afghan child receive shrapnel to his chest. Under fire and risking his own live, he crawled 50 yards to the child and gave immediate medical attention. After the firefight, Miles had saved the child's live. Though he did not receive any medals or promotion, Corporal Miles was the good Samaritan for a child in need that day.  

Monday, November 17, 2014

Common Themes

The stories "The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant" and "Catch the Moon" both shared common themes. In "The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant", the 14 year old narrator takes 17 year old Sheila Mant on a canoe to go to a concert. While doing this, she tells him about herself, and tells him that she thinks fishing is dumb. The narrator is a diehard bass fisher, but does not tell Sheila this. However, he forgets to reel in his line and bait from the boat and the biggest bass in the river decides to get hooked. Stuck between his dream girl and the biggest fish he has ever caught, he ends up letting the fish go. After the concert, Sheila ends up going home with another boy and the narrator loses not only the fish, but his girl. In "Catch the Moon", a young Hispanic boy named Luis works with his father on a junk yard under court order. He is a leader of a small gang who creates trouble in his neighborhood. One day at work, Luis sees a very beautiful girl who is looking for a new tire cap for her car. At the end of the story, Luis goes to the junk yard at night to find the tire cap, and returns it to the girl.

Both themes can be described as a changing in character by letting go of something. In "The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant", the narrator has to let the fish go because he can not reel it into the book with Sheila there. He gives up something he loves doing for someone he loves. In "Catch the Moon", Luis gives up his rebellious nature to find a purpose in helping others, such as his father at home and finding the tire cap for the girl. In both stories, the protagonists ends up changing their old ways to start a new beginning, even though Luis gets what he wants and the narrator from "The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant" does not end up with the girl.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Poe's Theme

      
           If we think of Edgar Allan Poe' works, we think of dramatic short stories and horrors. Though Edgar wrote more than just that, we remember his most important works such as "The Masque of the Red Death," "The Cask of Amontillado," and "The Fall of the House of Usher."   But what are the themes of his most favorite works?

           We can look at the themes for this stories and poems as a view of life, especially Edgar Poe's life. Poe's life is filled with sudden death and tragedy. Many of his family, including his wife, died of illness. Reflecting off of this, Poe used this life experience to most (if not) all of his stories. The stories and poems he created follow a simple theme, the narrator or main character suffers from the death of a love one, such as "Annabelle Lee" and "The Raven". However, some of his other known works, such as "A Tell-Tale Heart" and "The Cask of Amontillado" are known as murder stories, where the narrator kills off another one. This follows a more sinister theme that Poe had created, but also follows the common theme of life. Though the murders in both stories are completely different, the theme of both can be the sense of guilt or being able to continue everyday life, even though you may have done am illegal activity such as murder.

           In "The Fall of the House of Usher", Poe creates a story in which a man visits his dying friend in his crumbling estate. Many critics have dissected this story into different meanings. Some view it politically as the old hierarchy (the Usher's and their house) is 'falling' and is a dying way of life. However, it can be viewed in a simpler theme. Everything comes to an end. Since the Ushers were an old family loom, it was destined to die off, such as the condition of the house. This also follows the common theme that Poe uses in his other stories and poems. Life eventually comes to an end, and there is no way to stop or shape it.