Preview

Jacob Have I Loved

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
341 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Jacob Have I Loved
Jacob Have I Loved is a great book for any child that resents their siblings, because that's how this twin sister relationship is best described. Sara Louise recalls her difficult adolescence on Rass Island and her intense jealousy of her own twin sister Caroline. Caroline is a selfish, over protected person and Sara Louise feels like her life is based on competing with the most admired sister Caroline. Caroline always got what she wanted and was considered to be the attractive one, smarter one by her mother and grandmother. Foe example one day before attending church when Sara Louise unexpectedly "became a woman" she stained her Sunday dress and couldn't go to church, her grandmother had a cocky attitude because she couldn't attend church that day. But when Caroline had her period she was congratulated That's just many of the trails that made Sara Louise stronger throughout the book.

Caroline is assumed to be the better sister, but in reality Sara Louise is the independent and strong sister, she never let anything stand in her way. When Caroline needs other people for almost every thing and is surprised when she doesn't get her way. For example, Sara Louise and her best friend Call, Call thought Caroline was attractive but rarely played with her. He liked Sara Louise's personality, she wasn't fake and didn't pretend to be someone she's not. But when Call came back married to Caroline from the war, all of Sara Louise's dreams were lost, but still remained friends with Call and kept going on and on. Yet another example of Sara Louise's strengths.

This book emphasizes with Sara Louise and helped me see her point of view and better understand that all people have their own talents that they may not have discovered yet. This twin sister relationship was based off of jealousy and beauty that would have never have been if they were both treated equally and their mother and grandmother didn't play

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Waverly’s mother is a very proud person, and this is unchanged from the beginning to the end of Amy Tan’s “Rules of the Game”; but actually, she becomes an antagonist near the end of the story. It is understandable that she, as a mother, is always proud of her daughter’s success, but her excessive pride has triggered a conflict with her daughter Waverly, which reveals that mutual understanding is quite important for a parent-child relationship, especially for adolescents.…

    • 520 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    English Belonging Speech

    • 715 Words
    • 3 Pages

    growing up in China during the second world war, and her story of being an unwanted daughter. This novel conveys a sense of not belonging as Adeline does not feel accepted within…

    • 715 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The novel that I am reading is “I’m Not Her” by Janet Gurtler. It is about the struggles a young girl, named Tess, goes through when she finds out that her sister, Kristina, was diagnosed with cancer. Tess has always been looking up to her older sister, because her sister was always the center of the crowd, sporty, beautiful one and Tess was always the smart, un-popular one. It was always hard on Tess, so when her sister was diagnosed with cancer, she felt as if she could finally be known. All of Kristina’s friends started befriending Tess, now that her sister wasn’t at school. Although Tess loved the popularity, she did have a lot of trouble too. Not a lot of people were asking how Tess was doing about the whole cancer situation but there was one person who was always there for her. His name was Clark. After talking days upon days with him, Tess began to want to be more then friends with him. But Tess also knew that she had to be there for her sister and didn’t have time to have a serious love life at that point in time. Then Tess met a boy from school named Jeremy. Jeremy has a little crush on Kristina, but is also now good friends with Tess. Tess was wondering why he would always talk about Kristina, and then he finally informed her that he always hangs out with her at the hospital when he is visiting his mother, who also has cancer.…

    • 696 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Jacob is a Roman Catholic. He believes he is on the way to the Kingdom of God. He tries to take his faith seriously because he understands that their is someone greater than him. He is an older brother of two siblings. Katie is his younger sister who is quite. She plays basketball, volleyball, and runs track. His favorite teacher is Mr. Bulau even though his favorite subject is math. He wants to attend Texas A&M to become a petrolium engineer. Jacob wants to marry a, “good lookin” wife and have two or three children while living in in Texas. His one wish is…

    • 321 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sometimes, the quietest of shyest people are the ones who have the most beautiful talents. Drew Hayden Taylor develops the theme of wonder in the story Girl Who Loved Her Horses as Danielle, shown to be quiet and shy, creates a beautiful piece of art that stuns the other people included in the story. This essay will summarize the contents of the book, point out literary devices that helped to bring out the magic in this story, and discuss the plot and theme. The story showcases a young girl, Danielle, who visits one of the mothers of the community who has an ‘Everything Wall’ in her home.…

    • 404 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I was captivated by Jacob’s self-narrated memoir, but I have this unmasked fear of finishing books I enjoy. It’s like I’ve entered this world with great characters but once their stories are finished I must leave. I didn’t want to leave the pages that exposed the truth of Jacob and Marlena’s affection or the cruelties of Uncle Al and August. But the book locked me in and all I could do was turn the pages until I reached page 331 and the story was…

    • 738 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the book Animal Dreams, by Barbara Kingsolver Codi and Hallie are sisters who are very much alike physically. They differ greatly when it comes to personality. They both grew up with the same parent situation, raised the same, and yet they are two completely different people. Most of the similarities between them are physical, which is obvious because they are sisters. The way Codi and Hallie were raised, greatly affected who they became. What separated the two sisters is how each of them viewed their childhood, and how it built their character.…

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tiffani Research Paper

    • 523 Words
    • 3 Pages

    On March 22, 1989 a star was born in Brooklyn. Parents Robin and Lee Laibhen gave birth to a daughter named Tiffani. Tiffani was eight pounds and seven ounces and a very healthy baby. Tiffani was born Haitian, Puerto Rican and Black with her Haitian roots from her father Lee and her Puerto Rican and Black roots from her mother Robin. Because she was raised by both parents Tiffani was spoiled rotten until she moved to. One of her memorable memories happens to Tiffani at the age of 15 in Philadelphia. She was not going to be the baby anymore and experienced first hand the wonderful and painful delivery of her baby sister. Taffani said, "Watching the birth of a child makes you second guess on having kids. It looks so painful." That was not the last sibling Taffani's mother had. Robin also gave birth to two more children giving Tiffani another sister and brother. Tiffani was still a shining star but not only to her parents but to her younger siblings as well.…

    • 523 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Looking for Alibrandi

    • 1103 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The characters of John Barton and Jacob Coote have several similarities. John and Jacob are in a same age group of same generation; both are high school year 12 students. They both have leadership in their school, one is the captain of cook high and one is the private college’s student leader (Marchetta, 1992). Their leadership attributes attract Josephine becoming a friend with them. Also John and Jacob have been experiencing the adolescence’s periods as well as Josephine. These two boys have self yearn and both of them want freedom and the rights to choose their own future (Marchetta, 1992). The novel shows John has significant communication problems with his parents and families; there is a serious gap between him and his parents. Part of the reason is because they are politician and have excessive expectation from John which makes him feel extremely stressful and unconfident. Similarly, Jacob has the same communication problems with his families. Eventually the lack of communication, the ignorance and indifference in john’s feeling from his family culminates in…

    • 1103 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Why I Live at the P.O

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In this short story we meet Sister and four members of her family. The Protaganist of the story ia Sister , the oldest child of two girls, and her younger sister Stella-Rondo is the family favorite. It seems everything Sister wants, Stella-Rondo gets. Sister says that Stella-Rondo stole her boyfriend for it was Sister who had been dating Mr. Whitaker first until Stella- Rondo, being the jealous person she was told him that Sister was "one-sided," unequal on both sides. And that in-turn ended the relationship.Sisters real problem is that she is extreamly jelous of Stella-rondo. And she, Sister, at times can be a little selfish. For instance at the end Sister says to herself, "And if Stella-Rondo should come to me this minute, on bended knee, and attempt to explain the incidents of her life with Mr. Whitaker, I'd simply put my fingers in both my ears and refuse to listen" (153). That statement alone defines her jealously and selfishness towards her sister, because it seems Mr. Whitaker is the only thing she is really upset about for she makes no mention about any of the other family members,…

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sara's experience took a lot of effort when it came to the simple things that she needed to face. It wasn't only a new environment for her, but also to her family that had a lifelong history in the…

    • 370 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Beyond words

    • 1102 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The book begins with Diane detailing her life from young single musician to college graduate, professor, and wife and expecting mother. Benny, her first child was born a ‘radiant” child who from an early age shared his mother’s love for music as he would sway happily to the sound of her playing Mozart on her clarinet. By the age of two Diane and her husband David began to notice that Benny had missed virtually every milestone and had an inability to produce words, prompting them to have him evaluated, and thus Diane’s journey to heartache and eventually inclusion begins.…

    • 1102 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Good to Evil

    • 1059 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Wright, Eric. "Twins." 1990. Echoes 11: Fiction, Media, and Non-fiction. Comp. Francine Artichuk, Graham Foster, Janeen Werner-King, Diana Knight, Liz Orme, Kevin Reed, and Peter Weeks. Toronto: Oxford UP, 2001. 213-17. Print.…

    • 1059 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    I Stand Here Ironing

    • 478 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The story begins with a woman ironing her daughters dress. It causes her to recount the life she as provided for her daughter Emily. As she considers her actions she wishes that she had done some things differently. Unfortunately, the depression era had left her with very few choices if any at all. So to survive and provide for her children the mother, abandoned by her husband, had unintentionally, not protected nor not made the best choices for Emily. Several times, during the course of Emily childhood the mother would leave her to the care of other, a few of these times for extended stays. The mother knew that some to these situations were not to Emily’s best interest but she would leave her just the same. The outcome would mold Emily into emotionally, mentally, and physically deprivation. It also caused Emily to lose the beauty she was born with which resulted in self-esteem issues. This might have been the reason for the conflict she had with her siblings, the siblings that she helped to care for who were younger than her. Even thought Emily had a low self-esteem and grow to be frail, sickly, and nonchalant, she discovered that she had talent as a comedian after winning a talent show at school. Emily became a comedian and preformed at other schools, colleges, and community fairs. With new confidence and growing in maturity Emily’s acquired a beauty all her own. The mother observed this as she completed her ironing and prepared for bed, than she wondered why she even worried at all. She figured out that even though she helplessly made mistakes along the way raising Emily, causing for many imperfections in her child whom was now nineteen, that she still had the power to reassure Emily of herself worth. She still had time to be a better mother.…

    • 478 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Having Our Say

    • 1372 Words
    • 6 Pages

    To start things off, the lives of Sarah and Elizabeth are quite peculiar and interesting to me. Amy Hill Hearth first met the one hundred year old sisters, Sarah (Sadie) Delany and Elizabeth (Bessie) Delany when she was a reporter for the New York Times. When I found this out, I automatically thought this was going to be a good book because one, it is about two sisters who are over a hundred years old, and two, because Amy Hill Hearth is a reporter for the New York Times, which is a prestigious newspaper. In order to contact the Delany sisters, Amy had to call them, but to her dismay they sisters had never installed a phone in the Mount Vernon home, in New York. Now that is just weird. How do they not have a phone, in order to do almost anything in this society, you need a phone, not having a phone is like living in a cave, being secluded from the world. The occupations the two sisters had are also interesting. Elizabeth was a well known dentist in Harlem and also the first black woman to teach domestic science at public high schools in New York City. , and Sarah was the first black home-economics teacher at a public high school in New York City. Since…

    • 1372 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays