Preview

Toni Morrison Abandoned Store Waterfront Setting

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
69 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Toni Morrison Abandoned Store Waterfront Setting
The setting of an old, abandoned storefront is described when the author writes, "Visitors who drive to this tiny town wonder why it has not been torn down, and residents just look away" (Morrison 33).

Toni Morrison describes the setting of an old, abandoned storefront when she writes, "Visitors who drive to this tiny town wonder why it has not been torn down, and residents just look away" (33).

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In David Guterson’s short essay “No Place like Home,” he visits communities like Green Valley and meets with residents to discuss the lifestyle of the average suburban family, typically four members in total, who live in the walled in, well watched, prestigious sounding, city sized western version of our local community Landfall. While the essay begins with a sunny sounding tone the reporter almost attempts to portray the community as a facade with something dark lurking in the deeper corners, he does this by phrasing certain things with a suspenseful tone in the first paragraph. David does, inevidetly reach some of his darker topics as he address crime and a certain area of politics. His point, after all though, seemed just to be to inform…

    • 288 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ray Bradbury, author of “The Pedestrian,” uses word choice to convey a dreary tone. Bradbury makes it evident that Mr. Leonard Mead is walking a desolate path by his feeling of being “alone in this word.” The author describes charming cottages as “walking through a graveyard”(The Pedestrian). This contrast gives the reader a feeling of lifelessness from what could have been an inviting neighborhood. There would be a different impact on the reader if the neighborhood was simply described as silent. Mr. Leonard Mead also notices how everyone is sheltered in their “grey and silent” homes(The Pedestrian). By describing the houses in this way, Bradbury is creating a dull atmosphere which supports the dreary tone of the short story. The author would…

    • 214 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At first, Holcomb is described as an ordinary town with “flat land”, being somewhat “out there” and its people having an “accent barbed with a prairie twang.” These boring qualities of Holcomb are supported by Capote’s allusions to the “ramshackle mansion”, “one-story frame affairs”, and the “peeling sulphur-colored paint” of the depot. After Capote has built this view of Holcomb, he contrasts the town with an unanticipated outlook on the town. He describes the school as “modern and ably staffed”, the people as “prosperous”, and that Finney County “has done well.” The contrast of different parts of Holcomb make you wonder what other things about Holcomb are you not aware…

    • 341 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Truman Capote's excerpt, from his book In Cold Blood, depictes exactly how the reader should be imagining this place to be a small town “nowheresville,” Kansas. A place that just by itself and not known.…

    • 302 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    cup bearer that brought him his food and drink. He obtained permission and a guarantee of safe…

    • 1945 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    e a seemingly normal town. They had thrown a rooster tail of dust and gravel for miles on empty country roads only to come to this place. They had returned to Attica.…

    • 266 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Highwaymen Analysis

    • 1888 Words
    • 8 Pages

    When discussing the history of Rondo women are often not included in the discussion. Likewise, when discussing present day Rondo businesses that were lost are not discussed. In the “The Highwaymen”, performed by the History Theater, no women were portrayed, and no resolution is made for the loss of Timothy Howard’s barber shop. Women play an instrumental role in the history of any society, but in the context of Rondo their roles in the community are missing from the narrative. Females represent the heart of many communities and by denying their stories an entire section of Rondo history is lost. The destruction of Rondo Avenue by I-94 was detrimental to the business district in Rondo. These were stores where parents did their shopping, where…

    • 1888 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    During his stay there he pondered the question: How is the Mall of America part of America? The first thing that Guterson notices is the vast, expansive nature of the mall. After having observed some of the shoppers, Guterson concluded that despite the malls expansiveness, it elicited claustrophobia, sensory deprivation, and an unnerving disorientation, (Guterson p. 452). According to Guterson, these feelings lead to a sense of isolation, away from any kind of community that encourages socialization. Guterson believes that the desire to fulfill these communal requirements is intrinsic to human nature and the shopping mall is only a hindrance to this…

    • 973 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Garcia Márquez Childhood

    • 442 Words
    • 2 Pages

    García Márquez perfectly paints the old town as a tiny ghost town. The town is painted as dusty and ran down; no human in sight. Márquez describes a murder that he seen the body of the deceased as a young boy. The story goes, "At three in the morning the sound of someone trying to force the street door from the outside had wakened her. She got up without lighting the lamp, felt around in the armoire for an archaic revolver that no one had fired since the War of a Thousand Days, and located in the darkness not only the place where the door was but also the exact height of the lock. Then she aimed the weapon with both hands, closed her eyes, and squeezed the trigger. She had never fired a gun before, but the shot hit its target through the door." Mr. Márquez saw the body on the steps on his walk to…

    • 442 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This allowed a couple of sorry sub-primers like us to obey the realtor’s credo--Worst House, Best Neighborhood—and weasel our way into a top-flight school district. The house itself—a suburban ranchburger of dun-colored brick with trim the color of old coffee—was almost beside the point. Two distinguishing features barely saved her low-slung anonymity from total invisibility: She had been built by a Melville scholar in 1960 who’d equipped Ranchburger with nearly 150 linear feet of built-in bookshelves. And she was in our price range. I.e. insanely cheap. This helped us ignore the gold-flecked Formica counters, ancient Venetian blinds, and Sputnik-inspired light…

    • 1091 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The outside was white with bricks showing through suggesting the building had probably been there some time. The lobby was several shades of brown except an out of place brightly multicolored cabinet that was in the corner. I was reminded of old books and newspapers as the lobby seemed to be made out of dust in the best way possible and it smelled like warm cinnamon. A sign on the wall offered apartments and hotel rooms. Despite the wooden vacancy sign hung outside, no one came out to greet us in the fifteen or so minutes we waited. We eventually called it and took off down the road. As we walked farther down Wright street and tried to avoid the small amounts of traffic we came across a few abandoned buildings, a photographer’s dream. Cracks and crevasses ran up and down the walls and vines crept up the sides of the buildings, wound their way through the cracks and and bursting through the windows that had been boarded up with wood that had begun to rot. My curiosity was peaked and it took a lot of self control to not find a way in to further explore the buildings but through the remaining dirty windows I could see a lot of old wood and what looked like trash on the floor. The building on the end was especially peculiar for it had the remnants of some poster that had been hung there once upon a time but now all that’s left are some eyes. They seemed to watch you wherever you went and they reminded me of the eyes of Doctor…

    • 1239 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Homelessness & Poverty

    • 1155 Words
    • 5 Pages

    For a brief moment the bustling streets are deserted. The stores and shops have closed. The last bus filled with the city’s nine-to-five office workers has left. The commuter trains filled with business executives are speeding toward suburbia. Store lights have been dimmed and street lights have come on. The evening’s wind picks up as the temperature plunges on another winter night. Heated apartments are a welcome haven for the city dwellers, while blazing logs in the fireplace spell “home, sweet home” for the suburban commuters. The hot dinners and soft beds that follow are taken for granted.…

    • 1155 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    "Burned-out", "old", and "battered", she describes her hometown, yet she still yearns for it. From this, it is concluded that it is not the quality of the items she seeks, but the…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although it was only a railway station it held a certain grandeur, however it was not so now, for that was it in its former glory. A truly different sight beholds me now,creepers and vines reach upward, like the boney fingers of a witch. Corridors with cracked flagstones out of which weeds protrude and moss lingers. Must hangs in the air. Rust continues to corrode the tracks, graffiti encapsulates and engulfs the far wall. Tattered posters show a glimpse of what used to be of the place. Old newspaper flutters in the wind, floating on a cushion of wind. Alcoves show the remains of where shops used to trade. Like a black and white movie no colour was really visible. Some were,vaguely, but most not.…

    • 307 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    last leaf

    • 2826 Words
    • 12 Pages

    In New York City, there's a small district just west of Washington Square, where the narrow, irregular streets have run crazy and broken themselves into short strips called places. It's an ancient, residential community where many of the beautiful, old, brick houses date back to the 1820's, when an epidemic forced people from the city to what was then a rural suburban village. Now, in the final year of the nineteenth century, we find clusters of colorful restaurants, theaters, and shops. People interested in the creative lifestyle were attracted by the quaint, continental atmosphere, and so, to this village of the big city, they've come: the artists, the actors, the musicians, the dancers, the writers, hunting for nirth windows and 18th century gables and Dutch attics and low rents.…

    • 2826 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Good Essays