Sheboygan Falls HS discussion
Beginning Conflict
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[deleted user]
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Oct 10, 2013 08:37AM
What incident or conflict does the author use to begin the story? Why do you think the author chose this beginning? Give two possible reasons. Be sure to name the book (title) and the author.
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I believe the author chose this beginning to start with lots of action to pull in the reader into the book and to also introduce all four of the main characters of the book.

Tyson wrote: "In The Rivalry Mystery At The Army-Navy Game by John Feinstein the conflict is that there is something odd at The Army Navy Game. I think the other chose this conflict because right in the title is..."
Can you explain "odd," Tyson? I'm not sure what the conflict is.
Can you explain "odd," Tyson? I'm not sure what the conflict is.


“It’s so hard to talk when you want to kill yourself.”
Just by reading the line makes readers who are into “darker” themes want to read more.





Before the book starts, Mary’s father was infected and turned into an Unconsecrated, a zombie like creature.The Unconsecrated are a constant threat to the only village left on earth, but Mary’s mother always told her stories about the ocean and how the waves would roll and crash onto the sand. It always left Mary thinking that there is more outside of the village that they live in. Her wild imagination leads her to believe in love, happiness, and life with Travis. This is an internal conflict within Mary as she tries to figure out if it is worth it to leave the safety of the village to find her ocean.I think the author chose this to begin the story because the fact that Mary believes in the ocean is what keeps her going everyday and when the village fence surrounding them is breached by the Unconsecrated; Mary, Travis, Cassie and Harry followed by Jed (Mary’s brother) and Beth (Jed’s Wife) have no choice but to go down the path that leads into The Forest of Hands andTeeth. Where the path is so narrow at times that if you make one wrong step, you could trip into the arms of the Unconsecrated, who are thrashing and clawing against the rusty fence that runs along the path because they can smell the fresh skin of human.
The conflicts in this story only get deeper and deeper, but in the end everything becomes clear, like crystal.


And for 10+ years of this, Montag never questioned his ways or methods under the motto “fire is clean”. However in this world that is apparently taking place sometime in post 1990 (the book was written from 1950-3) education has changed from learning for meaning to learning right from wrong. Nobody cares why something works they only care that it works correctly. Entertainment is king, televisions are not sets but entire rooms of communication between people, religion has been forgotten with all sacred texts having been burned and government is now just secretly fighting wars with unmanned fighters being sent to bomb who they please.
Though when after 10+ years of secretly stealing books, one at a time from house burnings Montag really starts to wonder: “What's the harm in a book?” In a world where books are treated like we would treat a bomb with no actual reason, Montag has to fight himself and his own mindset to try to find out why does he do what he does. Also his wife yells at him a lot but that doesn't seem to change his mind...at all.
I think the author did this either, A: To make the reader feel really connected to the main person while also letting you know every difference between the modern and fictional world. Or, B to make the reader feel extremely unconnected to the character since they are in a situation that you would never encounter witch lets the reader imagine what will happen next.


For school, his name was a problem. Attending St. Josephs school, kids gave him a nickname. Piscine’s name came upon to “Pissing”. Even the teachers called him “Pissing”. The name stuck onto him for awhile. Eventually he moved to a different school called Petit Séminaire. To cover up the name he carried, Piscine came up with a new name for him which was “Pi”.
The purpose of this conflict in the beginning is to give the reader interest. It made the reading much more interesting. The conflict was humorous when teachers and kids called him “Pissing”. Another reason why the author chose the conflict of Piscine’s name in the beginning because of how you can take something bad into something even better. For instance, Piscine’s nickname at St. Josephs was “Pissing”. When he went to a different school, he got the chance to take the advantage and create a new name. The new nickname the students and teachers called him was “Pi”.



I think the author wrote so much about her wishing that she could talk because she might want the reader to be more interested and wonder if she will ever find a way to talk and make the reader want to keep reading. Or she could want the reader to feel her and have an understanding of what she's going through and how hard it is not to be able to talk.




fice.When the next game comes james jjust has to sit there.


