Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Weekly Reading Response # 3

NAME Fiona Jackson  DATE October 20th, 2010
TITLE The Curios Case Of the Dog in the Night-Time. TIME: 2 HOURS
AUTHOR: Mark Haddon PAGES 106-226
TOTAL PAGES THIS WEEK 120 Pages

This book was very unique in a lot of ways. The book is written about something that happens to a boy and it is written from that boys perspective. What makes the book interesting isn't only the storyline though. It is also the fact that the boy is Autistic, or has something different about his brain that makes him think in ways that are very different than the way most people think. He can't understand human emotions, and relates better to animals than humans. He is a extremely logical person, and is amazing at math. He pretty much looks at everything in life as one big math problem. I think that I found the book interesting for those reasons. The story would have been pretty boring if it wasn't for the fact that you get to see it through the eyes of someone who thinks in a whole different way then you. It was like stepping into a whole new world, where things that seem totally normal in our world, upset you so much and causes so much pain you just have to sit down and groan. I also liked the book because the boy, (Christopher) overcomes some of his fears. He figures out ways on his own to help him overcome the fear that ruled his life. I liked that. But I didn't like the way the story ended. Christopher didn't really seem like he was happier in the position he was in at the end of the story than the one he was in in the beginning of the story. Which was okay, because he was pretty happy in the beginning of the story. But the story just kind of cut off. I was really surprised to find that it was over. I even flipped through the last blank pages to make sure I wasn't missing anything. It was strange. I mean, the book's last paragraph did have an ending sense, but it could have just been the end of the chapter the way it was written. 


Something that I really liked about a character was the way the Mother acted throughout this book. It might seem strange that I say this because the mother basically abandoned her son to go live with the man she had an affair with. But she was confused during that time. She had a bad moment. Then when Christopher didn't answer any of her letters, she began to worry and just assume that Christopher was angry with her. Then, when Christopher showed up at her house, and told her that his father had told him that she was dead, she moved out of the man she was living with's house and moved back to Swindon to be with Christopher which was probably very hard for her to do since she did love the man she was living with. I thought that it must have been a very hard decision to make. But I also felt very bad for the Father because Christopher was scared of him and thought that he was going to try and kill him, so he wouldn't go near him or talk to him. If Christopher saw him at all he would scream his head of. That would be so hard. Having your own son be so scared of you that he wouldn't talk to you or refuse to be in the same house as you. Anyway, overall I though that this was a really good book and would recommend it to other people.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Weekly Reading Response # 2

NAME: Fiona Jackson DATE: October 19th, 2010
TITLE: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night -Time TIME: HOURS
AUTHOR: Mark Haddon  PAGES: 1-106
TOTAL PAGES THIS WEEK: 106 Pages 

Something I have found really interesting about this book is that the main character, Christopher, is autistic. I am not positive about this but I am pretty sure. It is interesting because it is like he is writing the book, so it shows exactly how he thinks about everything. The way things make him feel. It is interesting because he is a really mathematical person so he thinks about everything really detailed. He has a photographic memory and he kind of explained what it is like to have a memory like that which is cool because it is so different than the way my memory is. This boy is so smart, but he is difficulty to talk to because his brain works a different way then everyone else's. I can't tell whether his parents understand what exactly is different about him. They clearly know something is different about him though because there are some things that he can't tolerate. for example, he won't eat anything that is yellow or brown, his food can't be touching, he has a game about the colors of cars which determine what kind of day he is going to have, he doesn't like to be touched, and would much rather be alone then with people. 

This book reminds me of a movie I watched once called Temple Grandin. That movie was about a girl who had autism and was also super smart and didn't like to be touched. This is the main reason that I think that Christopher is also autistic. The two characters had lot's of similarities, and it is interesting to compare the way the different writers/directors showed the way the autistic people think. In the movie they kind of showed a picture for everything she was thinking. In the book the author does a similar thing but uses words to describe it instead of a picture. I really think that it is interesting how people like this's brain works. They are just on a whole different level than everyone else. For example, in the movie, there was a scene where Temple was in class, and they were supposed to be reading out of a French textbook. It appeared that Temple wasn't reading the page, so the teacher got up and went over to her and asked why she wasn't reading. She replied that she already read it, even though the teacher had just told them to read it. The teacher took away the book and asked what it said. She recited the whole page like she was reading it from her memory. In the book, there is a point where Christopher describes his memory as a being a film. When people ask him to remember things he can simply press rewind, fast forward, or pause. It's the same concept. 


At one point in the book, Christopher's father told him to never do a list of things. 
1. Not to mention Mr. Shears name in their house. 
2. Not to go asking Mrs. Shears about who killed the bloody dog.
3. Not to go asking anyone about who killed that bloody dog.
4. Not to go trespassing in other peoples gardens. 
5. To stop this ridiculous bloody detective game. 
Christopher clearly understands this, but will not give up on his detective game. He just decides to do it in ways that his father did not clearly say. Which shows that he is very clever, but that his mind kind of works like a young child's. Kind of manipulative. But that he just doesn't understand when he upsets people. It must be really hard not to get frustrated with him really easily. I don't think that I would be able to keep as calm with someone like that as his father does. And I think that that is a big part of why his mother ran off. Because she really did feel like she couldn't take it anymore and that it would be better for everyone else if she just left. I can understand how she might of felt. But I am not saying that what she did was right. 

Monday, October 11, 2010

Independent Reading Book

My new Independent Reading Book is called The Curios Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon. 

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Weekly Reading Response

NAME: Fiona Jackson DATE: 10-6-10
TITLE: Animal Farm  TIME: 2 HOURS
AUTHOR: George Orwell  PAGES: 1-128
TOTAL PAGES THIS WEEK: 128

Question: What does this book make you think about? Why?

This is a really interesting book to me. The fact that in the book, the Animals rebel and run a whole farm by themselves and feel such strong hate towards the humans is crazy. Not crazy like it couldn't happen, but just crazy like hard to believe. I think that it would be really hard on humans if this were to actually happen because of the fact that humans are obsessed with being in charge of everything. Even among ourselves. That is the main reason we are always at war with each other anyway. Everyone wants control and power over everyone else. I think that is an instinct, because in Animal Farm, even the pigs want control of everything. It isn't a problem with the other animals because the pigs are the smartest, and the other animals are to dumb to understand that they are getting rid of their old controller, (the human, Jones) and just replacing him with a new one, (the pig, Napoleon). I thought that was interesting because it seems like it may be a theme of the book. 


What surprised you about this book? Why?


What surprised me about this book is the fact that the whole point of getting rid of the humans on the farm was so that they could have their freedom, and never be hungry, or be forced to work for the benefit of someone else. And then how they did have that, but pretty soon, the pigs started to become more and more dominate. Actually, I take that back. I wasn't surprised that much when you find out that Napoleon was the leader and he was planning on becoming more and more important until he got to the point that he got the best of everything. I could tell from the very beginning that that was going to happen. At first, I thought that Snowball was going to become the president or new leader. But then Napoleon ran him out. I still haven't decided whether or not Snowball really was to blame, or if Napoleon made it all up in order for him to have more power. I was surprised though, when you find out at the end of the book that the pigs are back in league with the humans. I really thought that they understood more that the humans were bad and way smarter than the pigs. I really think that it is just animal nature to want to always be in charge. Or to want to always have the best of everything. The farm was a lot more successful when all the animals were equal and they actually followed the original seven commandments. That is what was fair. All the animals were equally happy, and they made a lot more food that way. But then when the pigs started to slowly gain more control and become more and more selfish, everything started to get worse. The pigs were supposedly better than all the other animals so they got more food, and they got to drink alcohol, and they got to sleep in beds, while all the other animals suffered. 


What did this book remind you of? Why?
This book reminded me of another book series titled the Hunger Games. In that series, the people were forced to compete in a horrible thing called the Hunger Games, run by their leader, President Snow. The people rebel and end up overthrowing the president and elect a new president, who then just wants to have another Hunger Games. That reminded me of Animal Farm, because in Animal Farm, the animals overthrow the human that owns their farm,(Jones) and then the Pigs just take over and treat the animals the same way that Jones's treated them. The plot is kind of the same in both of the stories. 

Monday, October 4, 2010

Independant Reading

The book I am reading for the Independent reading project is Animal Farm, by George Orwell.