Instructions

Hello, Second Period!

For your ORB written assignment, I am requiring you to make three postings abou your ORB on this blog. You must choose three different options from the "blogging optins" handout (on First Class). I am looking for your commentary, which should make obvious why your ORB "educates your conscience."

Please, adhere to the expectations explained on the rubric (also on First Class).

Happy blogging!

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Character Sketch [Second Blog]

Sarah Muth
Character Sketch

Amir, the main character of the book, shows so much to the reader. The book is written as though he is telling it and is about his life from birth, to growing old. In the beginning, he is a young Afghan boy who doesn't really have a care. He is always trying to get his fathers attention and is running around Kabul with his friend Hassan. Around the age of 10 or 11 he begins to become selfish. Hassan is like family since his father is their servant and Babas friend (Amirs father) and Amir grows jealous of Baba treating Hassan like a son. He wants all eyes to be on him and only him. Hassan would do anything for Amir, even eat the dirt Amir walks on. He is so loyal to him that it drives Amir to the point of insanity almost. After Hassan takes a brutal beating for Amir and Amir fails to do anything about it, Ali (Hassans father) and Hassan decide to move out. The loss of the two was hard for Baba and slightly painful for Amir, but he also saw this as a chance to have Baba all to himself.
Years pass by and eventually Baba and Amir move to America and start their lives in California when war breaks out in Kabul. They leave their house to a trusted servant Rahim Khan. Baba becomes a merchant at a market in California while Amir follows his dreams of becoming a writer. A family from Kabul happens to be working in the same market as Baba and Amir grows fond of her. He ends up taking her hand in marriage and she moves in with Baba and Amir so she can take care of the now ill Baba. Baba ends up passing away when Amir is in his 20s leaving Amir with a hole in his heart.

After about four years of marriage, Amir and Soraya (his wife) decide on starting a family. After many years of trying and failing Amir continues to evolve in his writing career as Soraya becomes a teacher. Amir is now a mature intellect, still haunted by memories of Kabul that Soraya is unaware of, making him still remain as a coward instead of a hero. Within this time period, Amir receives a call from Rahim Khan who is slowing running out of time. Amir takes a trip over to visit Rahim who no longer resides in Amirs old house in Kabul.
In the time Amir spends in Afghanistan again, he slowly becomes his old childhood self. The coward who failed to fight, the coward to never stood up to people, and the coward who let Hassan get raped. Amir learns through his visit with Rahim many stories and secrets that leave him questioning his childhood and himself. He finds out that Hassan had moved in and taken care of Rahim as he grew sick with the help of his wife. He was told of the son Hassan and his wife had in that same house the two boys had grown up in together and even saw a picture of Hassan and his only child Sohrab. His happiness for Hassan dies when he discovers that when the Taliban came to Kabul to end the war, they massacred all the Hazaras, which was exactly what Hassan was. Hassan was taken to the street, shot in the head and then his wife was shot as well, and his child was sent to an orphanage. But one of the most depressing things Amir learns is that Hassan was really his half-brother..

Amir becomes a true man when he rescues Sohrab and after a few difficult bumps in the road, takes him in as his own son and takes him back to America with him. The ending of the book shows Amir as an older man who had been a coward who would never fight for anything, to a man that fought a Taliban man for Sohrab, fought through unbearable wounds, witness an attempted suicide from Sohrab and fought the hardest he had even fought before for someones forgiveness. Sohrabs. Making him an honorable hero.

Monday, February 15, 2010

The Boy in Striped Pajamas (1st Blog)

I am reading the Boy in the striped pajamas, I am about 1/3 of the way done with the book and creating my first blog. The main charactor's name is Bruno, and he has a sister named Gretel who is 3 years older than Bruno. Bruno always says that Gretel is hopeless and is nothing but trouble for him and her friends would always make fun of him because of his height, he was smaller than the other 9 year olds. Bruno has a mother and father, and some other charactors in the book are: Maria (the family maid), and Lars (the Butler). At the beginning of the book it starts with Maria packing all of Brunos clothes and belongings because they are forced to move out of Berlin to a place in the middle of nowhere because Brunos father's job requires them to move forced by the "fury". The new house called "Out-With", which is isolated and there are no other houses in site, there are no roads, and only 3 floors, and no streets! Compared to their old house which had alot of other houses around, and it was huge. As Bruno looked through his window with Gretel they began to be very puzzled with what they saw. There were thousands of people in the distance, Bruno went to ask his dad and he gave him a strange answer. He said that they werent human, and that they had nothing in common with him at all. Bruno started talking to Maria in his room, and she began to snap at Bruno for saying that his father was stupid. She told him a story about how her father paid for Marias mothers hisptial care and her funeral payments. She also had something strange about her that made me the reader feel like something was going on with Brunos father on what he was doing in this house.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

The Kite Runner [#1]

Sarah Muth
Explore Feelings

The Kite Runner is such a great book, though very violent, sad and depressing. Some parts will be very happy and be a good memory of Amirs but will usually take a dramatic turn towards sadness. The beginning is a little slow but when it really begins to take a turn and gets interesting (and very sad) is when Amir and his friend Hassan are flying their winning blue kite. Hassan is the son of Amirs family servant, but is like a brother to Amir and another son to Amirs father, Baba. Hassan and Amir participate in kite flying/running where, one person flies the kite and you try to be the last kite flying since people cut the kites, and when the kites go off, another person runs for the kite. But Hassan seems to always know where the kite will land and be there before it lands. Amir wins one day and Hassan goes to win the last cut Kite, a trophy of sorts, to give to Amir and says, "For you, a thousand times over."
Hassan is successful in getting the blue kite but runs into a sadistic bully named Assef who treats Hassan bad because he is lower class. Assef had much needed revenge planned out for Hassan who had stuck up to him one day for Amir and threatened to shoot him with a sling-shot. When Amir goes looking for Hassan, he finds him in an alley with Assef and two of his bully friends. Amir, being the scared chicken he is, watches as Assef pulls out his brass knuckles prepared to smash his face in. Hassan had a chance to not be hurt when Assef offered to not hurt him if he gave him the blue kite. Hassan refused though, because he was loyal to Amir and had promised him the kite.
The fight between Hassan and Assef began with Hassan first throwing a rock for self-defense, and ended with Hassan pinned down on the ground by the two friends. Amir wanted to help out his friend, but was too much of a chicken to, and because of this, Hassan was raped. And when they had met up later that night, Amir pretended he didn't see anything when Hassan, torn up shirt and bruised, gave him the blue kite he had promised. And it was completely unharmed, unlike Hassan.

This was one of the first very sad parts of the book to me because Amir just let it all happen. Hassan had always stood up for Amir and been a loyal friend, even when Amir wasn't a good person to him. And while Amir just stood on the sidelines while he friend was beaten and bruised, Hassan still stayed loyal to Amir by bringing the kite to him like he had promised.