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    The Lost Boy

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    Title: The Lost Boy (Based on a true story) Author: Dave Pelzer No. of Pages: 340 Major Characters: "¢ Dave Pelzer " A young boy who grows up in a home with a terribly abusive mother. He is incredibly skinny due to malnutrition‚ he wears rags for clothes‚ and his personal hygiene is appalling because he rarely has the privilege to bathe. He desires love from a family who is eager to care for him‚ and he desperately searches for that throughout his adolescent years as he moves from one foster home

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    Lost in Lord of the Flies The book Lord of the Flies‚ by William Golding‚ first published in 1954‚ became a very successful novel over the years. In 2004‚ ABC first launched the hit TV show Lost. These two have extreme similarities between each other‚ and Lost would not exist without Lord of the Flies. The mix of intrigue‚ survival skills and critique on human nature has made both the show and the book such respectable hits over the years. The similarities between these two are more than coincidental

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    Paradise Lost

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    One of Milton’s strengths used in his epic Paradise Lost is his vivid imagery. He uses imagery not only for visual impact but also for reinforcing themes and characterization. Many of the images used pertain to light and dark‚ which help to convey his main purpose of justifying the ways of God to man and illustrating Hell. Milton justifies the ways of God to man all throughout his story. Line twenty-two explains to man that God can make the darkness in one’s life go away by bringing "light" to

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    The Lost Symbol

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    The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown is an action packed book‚ with mystery‚ and a twist that will keep your head spinning for weeks. Yet another work by Dan Brown did not disappoint and won’t allow you to put it down until it is done. This book about the trials and tribulations of Robert Langdon while he is on a hunt for Peter Solomon‚ a friend of his who had been kidnapped by a man that has mystery surrounding him. In the novel‚ the fight against evil is taking place from three separate view points‚ Robert

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    Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation centers on the lives of two characters‚ Bob Harris (Bill Murray) and Charlotte (Scarlet Johansson). Bob is an aging actor and movie star from Hollywood‚ who struggles with a mid-life crisis. His visit to Tokyo is to film whiskey commercials as well as make appearances on some of the popular Japanese talk shows. On the other hand‚ Charlotte is a Yale graduate‚ who is also struggling with her life; she does not know what she wants despite being married to her husband

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    get stuck in our tracks‚ look around‚ and realize that we’re lost. The film Lost in Translation‚ directed by Sofia Coppola‚ is a brilliant motion picture that explores through what it means to feel lost and the connections‚ the choices we make and the journey towards finding ourselves. The film stars two Americans‚ Bill Murray as Bob Harris‚ a middle-aged washed up actor spending a few days in Tokyo advertising a whiskey brand‚ lost in a 25 year unhappy marriage‚ with Scarlett Johansson as Charlotte

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    Themes in Lost Horizon

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    has sought to create‚ find‚ or at least image a paradise on earth‚ a place where there is peace‚ harmony‚ and a surcease from the pain that plagues our lives. On the eve of World War II‚ James Hilton imagined such a place in his best-selling novel‚ Lost Horizon. The story itself begins when an evacuation of Westerners is ordered in the midst of revolution in Baksul‚ India. A plane containing four passengers is hi-jacked and flown far away into the Keun-Lun Mountains of Tibet. The plane crashes

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    17th Century English Literature Discuss the ideas of rebellion and authority in Paradise Lost by John Milton and George Herbert’s Denial and The Collar. Paradise Lost was published for the first time in 1667‚ whereas Herbert’s two poems were published in 1633. This period was called the Restoration. It started in England in 1660 under King Charles II‚ who restored the monarchy in England‚ Scotland and Ireland. The literature at that time was dominated by Christian writings and praises to God

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    Gatsby’s publication in 1925 put it at the forefront of literary work by a group which began to be called the Lost Generation. The group was so-called because of the existential questioning that began to occur in American literature for the first time after the war. Many critics argue that this Generation marked the first mature body of literature to come from the United States. The Lost Generation more specifically was a group of writers and artists who lived and worked in Paris or in other parts

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    been skimmed off and deposited in large ladlesful on that section of Paris adjacent to the Café Rotonde ’" ("Expatriates (1920s)"). In Hemingway ’s The Sun Also Rises‚ he credits Gertrude Stein with coining the term "The Lost Generation" by way of an epigraph to the novel ("Lost Generation"). While Stein was also an accomplished writer worthy of literary criticism‚ her Paris Salons and the influence she had on the writers of the time period prove far more interesting. "The assemblage of the era ’s

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