Preview

A Cry in the Wild by Gary Paulsen

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
341 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
A Cry in the Wild by Gary Paulsen
A Cry in the Wild by Gary Paulsen
Elements of Action/Adventure book

Gary Paulsen’s life experiences help him write his action/adventure stories because of living in the wild with all the wild animals. This could help him make the stories more interesting. It helps him know what they act like. Paulsen can go more in depth with his stories details. Some examples of this are in A Cry in the Wild and Wood Song where the bears are the main problem. He could go into great detail with the details on the bears because in Wood Song he actually had to deal with the bears being around his house. Gary Paulsen’s experiences helped make his stories by adding more interesting details and make it easier to visualize.

A Cry in the Wild used the six elements of fiction greatly. The hero element or the one that steps up in a bad or death faced situation. It was used when he found the food for himself and ate whatever he could find. Physical action or when characters are in extreme conditions. This happens when Brian wrestles the bear in the lake. There is also fast pacing or when the story starts off slower then speeds up till it gets to a climax. This could have to do with the hurricane or storm because it makes everything worse than it already is. Violence another element is graphically described action. When the pilot has a heart attack and the plane crashes is an example of that. The place that gives a sense of the conditions and obstacles also known as setting is the Canadian wilderness inn the summer. Brian was very lucky that it was summer not winter so it was easier to survive. The sixth element is quest or the journey could be when he gets lost in another part of the wilderness and can not find the lake. The six elements hero, physical action, fast pacing, violence, setting and quest were used greatly in A Cry in the Wild.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Most of the American history serves a great deal of pride, acknowledgement, and importance to its culture. Spreading democracy and liberty all over the world yet forgetting some part of the history full of abusement, racisms, and evil. The novel, Between The World And Me, written by Ta-Nehisi Coates, who is know for expressing black culture by writing novels, talks about some of this history. In his novel, he confesses all the fears filled in black Americans’ body in a letter that he writes to his fifteen year old son. When I first learned about the history of African Americans, I was shocked and I wanted to know even more about their culture and their backgrounds since, my culture is different from theirs. I was also disguised because American history was so cruel. One of the reasons that I took this class was also to learn more about African American culture. Ta-Nehisi Coates is also African American which helps the novel show his personal feelings and opinions…

    • 837 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Canyons By Gary Paulsen

    • 173 Words
    • 1 Page

    The book “Canyons” by Gary Paulsen is a difficult but great book for 8th graders. The story of Canyons takes place at a canyon, desert. The weather was sunny and hot. The main characters of this book are coyote runs and brennan.…

    • 173 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gary Paulsen was born on May 17, 1939 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Gary Paulsen is the prolific author of more than 40 books, 200 magazine articles and short stories, and several plays; primarily for Young Adults. Paulsen's interests in books and reading came when he was a teenager and walked into a library to escape the cold of a Minnesota winter. Once inside, and much to his surprise, the librarian offered him a library card and a book to read (Something About the Author, 1995). Reading helped Paulsen cope with a difficult family situation then and remains a constant in his life today.…

    • 303 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Modern society is filled with fears ranging from random shootings to world wide infection, but one thing that does not cross the many minds of those living in the today’s world is the fear of the world simply coming to an end. Years of religion and science have not led anyone to feel that the end of the world is fast coming. In the article by Ira Chernus called “Cheer up, it’s just the end of the world” she goes into great detail about just how much the end of the world lacks fear. After expressing the downward slope that the world made in the sense of fearing their last minutes on earth, Chernus goes on to tell how the whole idea got started. The idea that the world could even come to an end has been long forgotten yet Chernus brings up the good point that “Apocalyptic stories have been around at least since biblical times, if not later”.…

    • 496 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    We are also introduced to the main character's family, such as his wife Elaine, and his son Jamie. We also see what each person's role is within the family.…

    • 903 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Never Cry Wolf But Always Cry Truth When Wolf pups are born they are both deaf and blind, weighing only one pound, and then when they grow up they are ferocious killers, or are they? In the book Never Cry Wolf (1963) by Farley Mowat. Mowat was sent out by the government to go see if the wolves were killing all the caribou. Mowat use of ethos, humor, and personification to make me believe that the wolves are more curious and not a ferocious killer. First, Mowat used ethos to convince us the wolves aren't the real problem.…

    • 445 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Nto the Wild by Krakauer

    • 470 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In selections into the wild by Krakauer he describes what is known to happen to Chris McCandless on hit trip to Alaska. Chris’s goal was to live for a period of time disconnected from everything. He never made it back and people were very critical about his trip. Chris journalized his trip and a year later Krakauer later traveled to where he died. Krakauer and his team discussed McCandless’s challenges. Krakauer went to Alaska to visit the bus, his team was critical of McCandless, and I agreed with them for the most part.…

    • 470 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    When you enter the military, it is like being born again, and when babies are born into the world, they cry. Within the military, you are forced into a world where you have to adjust or you will not survive long. In the book Jarhead, Anthony Swofford, gives audiences an inside look on his life as a Marine during the Gulf War era. Swofford encounters life changing experiences while serving his time in the Marine Corps. He admits that joining the Marine Corps was a mistake. However, we all learn from our mistakes and Swofford has learned a great deal from his own indeed. Of the many things that he learned was the ability to cry, to be able to cope with the hardship and aftermath of the war. There are many ways to cry. Anthony Swofford found his way to cry by writing this intriguing memoir of his time in the Marine Corps.…

    • 1221 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Hatchet

    • 1326 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Gary Paulsen is an American writer, who writes many young adult coming of age stories about the wilderness. He is the author of more than 200 books (many of which are out of print), 200 magazine articles and short stories, and several plays, all primarily for young adults and teens. He was born on May 17 in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1939. He has also written sequels to Hatchet, these books form Brian's Saga which consists of:…

    • 1326 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Johnny was six, he stated that God was "what's good in me," and his drive to do good stays with him through his short life. What makes this inherent goodness more exceptional is his abundance of other supreme qualities. He is exceptionally intelligent, devoting himself to the sciences with both his mind and heart; his wit is pointed yet gentle; and he is mature beyond his years. He combines the best of childhood and adulthood—a child's endless curiosity about the world and an adult's maturity in understanding what to do with that curiosity. But two other qualities shine through in Johnny, and they often connect: his selflessness and his courage.…

    • 414 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ashes By Susan Pfeffer

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Susan Pfeffer’s story “Ashes” teaches a lesson about how trust is decided on past, not relationships. Ashleigh, “Ashes”, with divorced parents, talks about how when she is with her dad, the sun shines just a little bit brighter, but according to her mother, he is just an “irresponsible bum”. Ashes was a nickname her father gave her, which her mother hates. Ashes, says that her father hardly ever keeps a promise, such as when she was a kid, he told her that the stars were her necklace. One lesson the story suggests is that parent-child relationships can quickly change, depending on the choices they make.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This semester, I learned abundance amount of information that I did not know before and I took each and every new knowledge into heart. I learn about parallelism, misplaced modifier, PIE, commas, i.e./e.g., entry points/ strategies, active vs. passive verbs, and not using ‘you’ in academic writing and more but what stood out to me the most was PIE. Every topic I learned in this class will be in use toward my major but mostly in future papers. This semester, I learned point illustration explanation (PIE) in my writing skills which will be valuable in my future college papers.…

    • 1236 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In The Embers and the Stars by Kohák the intersection of time and eternity is expressed. Kohák has focused on "natural" time, which is to say that time is not just what is expressed by a clock, or with a series of numbers on a clock. "It is, rather, set within the matrix of nature's rhythm which establishes personal yet non-arbitrary reference points." This means that time is not measured in seconds, minutes, or hours but by personal existence and experience. These "reference points" are experiences in your life that are meaningful and you help spatially distinguish points in time. Time as we know it is explained by Kohák as a "construct imposed upon nature's rhythm, subordination and ordering it". He does say that it is a useful construct, but as for the theory of relativity time does not hold up.…

    • 322 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the poem When You See Millions of the Mouthless Dead by Charles Hamilton Sorley, the theme conveyed is a non-religious and more pessimistic or negative take on the death of soldiers in World War II. It is communicated as a way to cope with death, not soliciting an illusion of the person. The structure of the poem is in the form of an Italian sonnet since the octet and sestet are in one whole stanza, meaning that the poem’s idea or message is consistent and does not diverge. Firstly, the poem starts off with reciting the title and the lines, “Across your dreams in pale battalions go,/ Say not soft things as other men have said,/ That you'll remember. For you need not so,” that is referencing the intended audience, who maybe the friends,…

    • 344 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Once More to the Lake by E.B. WhiteOnce More to the Lake, by E.B. White was an essay in which a father struggles to find himself. The essay is about a little boy and his father. They go to a lake where the father had been in his childhood years. The father looks back at those years and tries to relive the moments through his son's eyes. He knows he can't, and has difficulty dealing with the fact that he can't go back in time. E.B. White's way of letting the reader know that the father is in a way depressed, is through great detail and description. The story mentions how the lake has changes since the father had seen it last. How the once gravel roads have been paved over, and the sail boats are now replace with boats with outboard motors. As the reader, one can sense a feeling of how the father isn't able to adapt to these changes. The little boy in the story, the son, also doesn't seem to appreciate the lake as much as the father did when he was growing up. Like how when he was a boy, he would wake up early to fish. Now the father wishes his son would do the same. It seemed the little boy just too the trip for granted. He didn't appear to be as appreciative as the father once was. The father describes the view as pretty much being the same. How things felt the same, like the moss on his feet and such. He didn't feel that the lake had changed any, but everything around it did. This is when the idea of a duel personality comes into picture. The father can almost see himself as a child, doing the things he wished his son would do. When he was young he would get up especially early to fix his fishing pole and even help set the dinner table. Then he realizes that his son doesn't do any of these things, making the father feel as if the trip just isn't the same. As the story progresses, the father begins to point out the differences of his once peaceful get-a way. How when arriving was something to look forward to, seeing all of the other family's greet you, the madness…

    • 548 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays