The
Journey Home was written by the acclaimed environmentalist author
Edward Abbey. This is one of his many pieces discussing the topic of
the wilderness and its incredible perfection. The Journey Home
is centered around a few main themes including the preservation of
the wild and the effects time has on the world around us. This
non-fiction book is an culmination of assorted life stories of Edward
Abbey that take place across contrasting environments within the
United States, varying from Hoboken, New Jersey; Yosemite National
Park, California; Albuquerque, New Mexico and Telluride, Colorado.
Edward Abbey is known as a “environmental philosopher,” and this
is clearly demonstrated in The Journey Home
in which Abbey comtemplates nature around him and the effect that
humans have on its health and well-being. I believe this book is a
form of a memoir for Abbey, in which he attempts to encompass the
adventures throughout his life. The most interesting aspect of The
Journey Home in my perspective
was Edward Abbey's view on the ever-present change occurring in the
United States. This was seen when Abbey returned to both Yosemite and
Telluride. In Telluride, he described the transformation the town
took with the arrival the ski resort driven by Joe Zoline. This man
“tainted” the eccentric, isolated beauty of Telluride and
represented the capitalist dominance within the US. Edward Abbey told
of the entrance of American middle-class hippies into Telluride and
how they permanently changed the atmosphere that the town earlier
held. Before it was a refuge for naturalistic hermits, but was then
commercialized as a “groovy ski town.” The same cultural demise
occurred in Yosemite National Park. Abbey described how he visited
the park in it's earliest days as a National Park, and has always
planned to return. He was only apprehensive because of numerous
accounts he had heard of the drastic decline the park has taken
because of a recent influx of hippies and bums. He eventually
revisited the park and stayed with a close friend who was,
coincidentally, a Park Ranger in Yosemite. While in the park, Abbey
shared stories with his long-separated friend and came to realization
of the speed at which the United States is moving. Towns are becoming
cities, and cities are becoming bigger cities. Abbey claimed that the
acceleration of urbanization was one of the reasons he enjoyed the
pure and simple life in the wilderness. For seven years, Abbey spent
the summer in a isolated cabin on fire patrol. He would watch out for
forest fires in the Pacific Northwest, and then report these fires to
local firefighters. These summers he claimed were his time of growth,
where identified himself personally. I enjoyed The Journey
Home and believe that Edward
Abbey is an incredible writer in general. The style of his work is
very personal and depicts his obvious love for the outdoors. I would
recommend this book to anyone who wants an interesting read about the
wilderness and its entirety. I plan on reading Desert
Solitaire by Edward Abbey for my
next non-fiction book because he is even more acclaimed for his
description and explanation of the desert and it's magnificence. I am
eager to be convinced that the hostile and brutal environment of the
desert is truly enjoyable and divine.
Welcome to our Class Blog! For an overview of what I hope we can achieve through this forum, please see the hand-out ("Notes on Blogging") under the file of the same name on our class web page.

Thursday, January 24, 2013
Into the Wild
Morgan Fansler
Book Review: Into the
Wild
“If
you want something in life, you have to reach out and grab it.” If I had to
pick a quote to describe Jon Krakauer book Into
the Wild, this would be it. Christopher McCandless was a
normal guy who was seeking adventure as opposed to his normal, conformed life.
He didn’t care for the luxurious lifestyle and tried to avoid it. McCandless
eventually was fed up with the life he was living a completely turned it upside
down. He set fire to his money and cut up all forms of identification and set
out on an adventure. I personally believe that the most amazing principle of
this book is that he purely did this on his own. Nobody told him to go live in
the wilderness and travel to Alaska for two years... he had the option to live
a healthy, put together life. He
simply woke up one morning, deciding that it was time for change. People like
Chris McCandless are the type of people I appreciate and seek to find in this
word because they were born with a different outlook on the world. They take
advantage of all the materials and beauties the earth presents them and embrace
it all, every day. During his journey, Chris McCandless reached out and found
safety in other people. He took note of the people that had the largest effect
on him in the journal that he kept during his two-year traveling period. He
wrote about the effects emotionally and physically from leaving society. He was
hungry, he was lost, and most of all, he was lonely. Coping with these emotions
must have been the hardest for him because they were so foreign and he could
only blame himself. However, the sheer feeling of absolute freedom is what
pulled him through. McCandless was one with the wilderness. He could start to
relate to the wildlife around him as well as the nature that consumed him.
Though he died on hunger in 1992, I can honestly say he died a free man with
more knowledge of the earth’s offerings then most people in this world. It
takes a real man to want to suffer for what he thinks is beautiful and
fulfilling.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
In Cold Blood
In Cold Blood Jared
B
In
Cold Blood, by Truman Capote, is a non-fiction book about
the murder of a family, and the escape, capture, and death sentence of the
killers. It is an edgy and very entertaining read that you will enjoy if you
like murder and mystery.
Truman
Capote started his career off in Europe. He wrote two books prior to coming to
America. When he arrived, he wanted to write an astounding non-fiction book. He
then came upon a story in Holcomb, Kansas about a murder. He researched the
story, became close with the killers, and wrote In Cold Blood, which
has become popular and made into a movie.
In
Cold Blood begins at the Clutter ranch in Holcomb, Kansas. It starts
off as a normal day for the Clutters, a wealthy family of four. While on the
other side of the spectrum, two men, Perry Smith and Dick Hitchcock, are on
their way to the ranch at the same time. The book begins with a back and forth
between the Clutters family and the two men. The Clutters are completely
ignorant about what is about to happen, while the two men are coming fast. It
jumps from the men to the family and back quickly to try and imitate a movie
scene. It keeps you on your toes, on the edge, waiting to see what happens
next. Once the men arrive at the ranch, Capote never actually writes about the
murders. He gives details for you to imagine what happens, but waits until
later to give away the full diagnosis to keep the reader hooked. Half of the
fun is actually finding out how the murder took place.
Once
the murder happens, Dick and Perry head out to across the country. We see how
they come to think of each other. For example, Perry got hurt in a motorcycle
accident and his legs cause him pain. Occasionally, when Perry is feeling pain
in his legs, Dick looks at it as Perry having second thoughts about everything.
Nonetheless, the two men make it across the country by writing hot checks. Back
in Holocomb, the investigation about who the murderers are, is taking place.
That is the first order of business. Eventually, Dick and Perry run out of
money, and are forced to head back West to look for work. About the same time,
the KBI (Kansas Bureau of Investigation) learns that Dick and Perry where the
ones who killed the Clutters by identifying a car license plate that the two
men were in. Dick and Perry are caught. Then the questioning begins.
They
go through a series of questionings, asking each man about a certain event.
Finally everything is learned about, the details of the murder, the motive, and
the escape. Dick and Perry each are put on Death Row. As it comes close to
their death, they each react differently. Perry seems to be remorseful while
Dick is awkward. The story of In Cold Blood concludes there.
I
would most definitely recommend this book. I really enjoyed it. It was a fun
read for people who like murder mysteries. But I read it somewhat quickly,
because it kept me on my toes waiting to know more. The way Capote made the
scenes jump from person to person let you see the event from both sides. Capote
was able to incorporate irony into this book, which gave it an extra edge. This
book was well written and very serious. The story line was interesting. This
would be on my must read list.
The Earth's Immune Response- A Review of the Hot Zone
The
Hot Zone by Richard Preston is a chilling read about one of
the most lethal viruses known to man: Ebola Virus. Written in 1994, after a
trip Preston took to Kenya, the book details the history, most virulent
outbreaks, and future of this biohazard level 4 agent. First seen in 1967, the
virus ravaged a small town in Germany with the virus delivered by an African monkey
importing and exporting trade. Here the virus was named Marburg. By 1989 three
other deadly filoviruses (or wormlike viruses) that cause hemorrhagic fever had
been discovered: Ebola Sudan, Ebola Zaire, and Ebola Reston. Each is named for
the river in the Congo where the virus is thought to have originated (the Ebola
River) and for the place where the first outbreak of the strain occurred. In The Hot Zone, Preston focuses especially
on the emergence of Ebola Reston. This particular strain sprang up in 1989 at
the Reston monkey house in the suburbs of Washington D.C. It was contained by a
quiet, but intense operation supervised by the Army. But with a highly
contagious and vicious agent we can never be sure when or where it will strike
next.
This book is terrifying because of the factual nature of
the horrific events that this virus has caused and because this virus has flown
under the radar, almost unnoticed by most of the world. It is a virus that
combines the worst of the flu, rabies, and AIDS. It is fast mutating and, were
it to become more efficient and airborne, it could wipe out 90% of the human
population on this earth within a year. We would have no time to find a cure or
protect ourselves; we would be entirely at the mercy of nature’s wrath. It
would be a quick and devastating end to civilization as we know it, but most
people do not even know that this threat exists. Scientists too are still in
the dark when it comes to Ebola. They have yet to find its natural host, its origins,
or its inner workings, though there are many theories. This elusiveness only
enhances the power of this virus, exploiting our weaknesses as a society. But it
is also what makes this book so powerful and arresting.
So often we humans play God. We think we have conquered
nature and this planet. We think our civilization will resist all that nature can
throw at us. Yet we are wrong. We are
often reminded that humans are small, fragile, and at the mercy of the planet. We take without considering the consequences
and, as a result, we sometimes unleash nature’s fury. There is a theory (substantiated by a good amount of evidence) that
points to the rainforests in central Africa as the birthplace of AIDS, Ebola,
and many other emerging viruses. But we are destroying these rainforests, these
reservoirs of life, and in the process unleashing these viruses from the jungle
and giving them free reign to terrorize civilization. In the words of Richard
Preston “In a sense the earth is mounting an immune response. . . attempting to
rid itself of an infection by the human parasite.” Perhaps it is time we
rethought our place in this world as subservient to the will of nature and not
as Gods without repercussions. Ebola virus will strike again but when it does,
will we be ready? Or will the human race be destroyed from the inside out, by a
microscopic organism with an insatiable desire to live?
Kool Aid Acid, Hold the Boring
-->
Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test
Keef
Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test was nothing
other than a madly-fantastical trip through time that kept you constantly
fact-checking the ridiculous stories you came across. Nothing about the first
concerts of The Grateful Dead, a cat and mouse game between the FBI, the drug
enjoying Kesey, or the cult of acid followers reaching transcendence follows
any type of life even the craziest of us could imagine.
Acid
was being released by the government or testing, and Ken Kesey (author of One Flew Over the Cookoo’s Nest &
Sometimes a Great Notion) signed up immediately, being given one of the
first batches of this new drug, with which he immediately fell in love. Quickly
growing a massive following, the New
Yorker sent out Tom Wolfe, the author, to cover the story. He soon rolled
with the “Merry Pranksters” in dirty San Francisco, home to the wonderful ol’ beat
generation, now replaced with dirty saloons and topless bars. The Pranksters
and Kesey wanted to bring this new way of life across America to every person.
So in light of Kesey’s new book being released they traveled across America in
a bus called the and filmed the entire experience, later releasing a movie. (It
was “cool”, the “in” thing if you made it into the “movie” or not.)
Upon
return, life kicks into another gear as the “Acid-Tests” begin. Wild forest
parties with neon clad trees, paintings and lights taking up every sensory
nerve with massive concerts (The Grateful Dead) as everyone popped acid like
M&Ms, reaching another level of transcendence. But a little marijuana
conviction doesn’t stop Kesey. Fleeing to Mexico, not digging it, and coming back
he begins to publicly toy with the cops, like a vigilante batman or Hellboy.
Now THAT is other-worldy fiction type stuff right there. It seems Kesey and
this entire experience has shaped the plots of so many ridiculous comedies
since the 80’s.
But
the Acid-Tests never actually worked without acid, as Kesey tried to let the
judge allow him to prove, and he was tossed in the jail.
I
had a pretty d*mn fun time reading this guy, I’ll get after it again at some
point in life. It was pretty liberating. The 60s, 70s, 80s were a time of
serious independence and breaking away from social norms of being…NORMAL. They
went for it, finding a lot about themselves, life, and what their little roles were
in the scheme of things. You feel as if you travel through the story with Wolfe. He’s intimidated, pretty
scared, and has no idea what to expect from such an awesomely strange group of
people becoming his friends. As a new kid in a foreign land he was trying to
fit in, trying to understand it all, just as you the reader are as well. He’s
open and honest about his feelings and it’s an amazing time.
And so we sit, and
read these tales, reaching a transcendence of our own: about what is possible
in a life. It’s wild to think that these people really did do absolutely
whatever they wanted, shamelessly, forging a bridge into an excitingly freaky
new time.
Unbroken Book Review
Unbroken Book Review
Nathan Shane Loomis
Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival,
Resilience and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand, the author of Seabiscuit, is
an inspirational, compelling, and intense novel. The story follows Louis
Zamperini, who was one of the fastest runners of the first half of the 20th century
and later entered World War II as a pilot. The book starts from the start of
his life when his parents migrated over to United States from Italy and
continues into Zamperini’s life in modern times. As a reader, you can admire
amount of detail and care put into this book, but Hillenbrand was just telling
us what happened to this American hero. It’s almost unbelievable what Zamperini
achieved and went through during his days of running and during the war.
The story begins with young Zamperini living in
Torrance , California with his parents and his older brother, Pete. As a child,
Zamperini was a delinquent. Every day he would find something new to upset his
teachers, his family or even the police. Bullies picked on him since he was an
Italian immigrant, but not for long, since his father taught him how to use his
fists. "Kids who crossed him wound up with fat lips, and bullies learned
to give him a wide berth.” One day he ran away from home with one of his
friends and lived under a bridge for a week living on nothing but lizards and
dead birds. When Zamperini became a freshman, in high school his brother, Pete,
wanted to clean up his act. Pete saw potential as Zamperini as a distance
runner for the high school track team. Zamperini had been running away from
trouble for years whether it was bullies, clerks, or the police. Pete motivated
Zamperini to train for the track team through fall and winter, and Zamperini
hated the training. Pete trained with him almost every day. As Zamperini would
do workouts runs, Pete would be on his bike shouting out times and would never
let Zamperini slack off. Finally, when track started, Zamperini joined the team
and found that girls were very attracted to track runners. This motivated
Zamperini to stay on the team, and by the end of his freshman year he ran a
4:50 mile (1600 meters). Zamperini excelled during high school, and his times
were legendary for back then. Zamperini got an athletic scholarship to USC and
was the top runner in the nation. He attended the 1936 Berlin Olympics and ran
the 5,000 meter. He got 8th place in the race with a time of
14:45. He ran his last lap in 54 seconds and he passed seven runners during
that lap. He was so fast that he even sparked the attention of Adolf Hitler.
Hitler called up Zamperini to his office and congratulated him personally by
giving him a handshake. When Zamperini came back from Berlin, he was treated as
a hero. Ironically, Zamperini’s USC track coach said the only runner that could
beat him was Seabiscuit. In Zamperini’s final year at USC, he ran a 4:08 mile
and it stood as a national record for 15 years.
After college Zamperini dreamed of flying and
enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1941. After Pearl Harbor he was stationed in
Hawaii. After a couple of months of flying around the Pacific and fighting in
colossal air battles, Zamperini was sent on a rescue mission with a crew of
eight other men to find survivors of a lost plane. When he and his crew were
about 800 miles south of the base, one of the engines lost power and they
crashed into the ocean. Only Zamperini and two other men survived the crash,
the men took refuge on two little life rafts (which eventually turned to one).
For more than a month the three of them lived off rain water, and they were
able to catch fish and seabirds that would come by their raft. After 30 days
tail-gunner Francis McNamara died, but Zamperini and pilot Russell Phillips
survived in the open sea for 47 days. They drifted for 2,000 miles. During
those 47 days they encountered sharks that tried to attack the boat (they were
able to beat some of them with their paddles and eat them). They also faced
Starvation, the scorching sun, dementia and were attacked by a Japanese plane.
Finally, they reached the Marshall Islands, but the next day the Japanese Army
captured them. They took the two into a Tokyo prison camp. Zamperini was
brutally beaten, tortured and humiliated in the prison camp. The Japanese army
gave no mercy to Zamperini. One of the grotesque punishments they gave
Zamperini was shoving bamboo up his fingernails, and then punching his face
until he got knocked out. Zamperini was held in prison camp for more than two
and half years. When America nuked Japan, Zamperini and other American
prisoners were set free, ending his three years of torture and survival.
Zamperini returned to Torrance, California, but
he still wasn’t at peace. Like many other veterans Zamperini suffered from
alcoholism and was haunted by night terrors and rage. In 1946, he married
Cynthia Applewhite, and three years later he converted to a Christian and
renewed himself. He later became an inspirational speaker and one of his main
themes was forgiveness. He even went back to Japan to find many of the officers
that tortured him in prison. He got a translator and told them that he forgave
them.
Over the years Zamperini has gotten many awards
like the NCAA 2012 Inspiration Award. He was also conducted to many Hall of
Fames, like the USC Athletic Hall of Fame in 1999. The book closes with
Zamperini returning to the Berlin Track Stadium for the first time since the
1936 Olympics. The moment is truly powerful.
Unbroken is one of the best books I’ve ever read. As a
track star, myself, I completely related to Louis Zamperini. His story is
extremely unique and epic. Zamperini has been through it all from competing in
the Olympics to being a prisoner of war. Zamperini is 93 years old and still
stands as one of the most inspirational WWII veterans. Louis Zamperini is truly
an American hero and a national treasure.
Me Talk Pretty One Day
Kira Hamblin
Holiday Book
Review:
“Me Talk Pretty One
Day” by David Sedaris
The autobiography Me
Talk Pretty One Day by the author, comedian and humorist David
Sedaris is a wonderfully written book that depicts Sedaris’ life from childhood
to himself today. The book runs the course of him in as peculiar young child,
to his bizarre career path and finally to his move to France. The book written
in 2000 is a collection of essays written by the author about his life.
Through out every essay in the book
there is an underlying theme of him reasoning for his sexuality. He explores
even in the first essay how even as a fifth grader he knew he was different
from the other kids. Sedaris has a wonderful voice in the autobiography, and
brilliantly form his autobiography into multiple short stories that have
defined his life.
Not only does the author have a
pleasing way of telling stories, but also he formats them in an order that
after every chapter it feels like you are digging deeper into his brain. He
skillfully combines the dark satirical language with a hard-hitting hilarious
punch line, which makes it incredibly enjoyable to read.
I recommend this book to someone who
maybe doesn’t want to read a large novel and is looking for a book that changes
paces and doesn’t continue on with same story. I for one am the kind of person
who likes to mix it up, and enjoys that every essay is different. Sedaris is a
genius in terms of how he formatted his autobiography; easily keeping people
engaged and excited to read about his life. An author who can successfully
portray his or her life in an easily read way is impressive and truly shows how
talented an author is. I highly
recommend the book Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris, to those who
like comedic and sometimes-dark humor writing, and those looking for a good
read that will keep you intrigued and want to keep reading.
Under the Banner of Heaven
Dorosi
Valle
Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer
On July 24, 1984, two brothers,
instructed to “remove the following individuals” by God, murdered a woman and
her infant daughter. Under the Banner of
Heaven reveals the details behind this murder, exploring the obscure world
of fundamentalist Mormonism. In this investigate work of non-fiction, Jon
Krakauer examines extremes of religious belief through unbelievable findings,
keeping even the most unmotivated reader flipping the page.
Under the Banner of Heaven begins with a general background of Dan and Ron Lafferty who
murdered Brenda and Erica Lafferty, Allen Lafferty’s wife and daughter. As the
book later explains, Brenda had been bad-mouthing the Lafferty brothers’ new
fundamentalist beliefs. Ron, who succumbed to fundamentalist Mormonism thanks
to his brother Dan, blamed Brenda for his recent divorce. Soon after, Ron
received a revelation from God to “remove the following individuals” so that
His “work might go forward.” In July 24 of 1984, Dan Lafferty entered his
younger brother’s house, murdering Brenda and Erica Lafferty. Dan now is
serving a life sentence and feels no remorse about the murders. He says “I was
doing God’s will, which is not a crime.”
To ground the reader as Krakauer
embarks on this “violent faith” journey, he provides a closer look at the
Mormon religion. From Joseph Smith’s childhood to the angel Moroni, Krakaeur
traces the foundation of fundamentalist Mormonism, establishing a clear
difference between mainstream Mormons and fundamentalist Mormons. From a
general standing, Under the Banner of
Heaven doesn’t just specifically focus on the Brenda and Erica murder case.
Instead, he uses the murder as a window into revealing much more. Krakauer exemplifies
fundamentalist lifestyles in Colorado City, Arizona. He exposes the world of
plural marriage hidden within small towns. Through jaw-dropping descriptions,
Krakauer gives an understanding of fundamentalist Mormonism as the more violent
faith.
This eye-opening novel examines an
American religion practiced by millions. The compelling true story of Brenda
and Erica’s murder is one of tragedy and sorrow. Under the Banner of Heaven discloses an in depth investigation of
fundamentalist Mormonism, making this obscure religion vivid and terrifying. In
conclusion, this is a book that must be read.
The Help
Kathryn Stockett,
author of The Help, was born in
Jackson, Mississippi. This is her first novel. After graduating from the
University of Alabama with a degree in English and creative writing, she decided
to start writing this book. She never thought that it would be as popular as it
was, and quite frankly never thought anyone would even read it, which is why
she wasn’t exactly trying to achieve anything with it. But since it came out,
this story about the relationships between African American servants and the
white women who employed them in Mississippi, spent over 30 weeks on the New
York Time’s best seller list. She started writing the book after Sep. 11th,
when she was living in New York City. She started to really miss home, seeing
as she couldn’t talk to her family to tell them she was fine. She started to
write in the voice of her maid Demetrie, the maid she had while she was growing
up. As she kept writing, personalities from that voice developed into her
characters, and she then made it into a book.
The Help is story about two black maids,
Aibaleen and Minny, and a white “socialite” who takes on the task of writing a
story about what it is like to work as a black maid in the South’s white homes.
This novel is set in Jackson, Mississippi in 1962. Aibaleen works for the
Leefolts, a white family, and takes care of everything while raising their
daughter, Mae Mobley, who Aibaleen calls her “special baby.” Mae Mobley is
physically abused and neglected by her mother. Aibaleen tries to build up Mae
Mobley’s self esteem and teach her about racial equality, throughout the entire
book, telling her always “you is smart, you is kind, you is important,” while
making Mae Mobley repeat it. Before Aibaleen started work at the Leefolts, her
son died in a workplace accident, something that could have been prevented if
his boss would have just helped him. You feel the pain she is going through
throughout the entire novel, as she is trying to raise another baby, constantly
thinking of her own being gone. Her life with this family is way better than,
say, Minny’s, because Aibaleen actually knows how to keep her mouth shut and
just do her job. You almost feel like she is some what respected in this
household, compared to the way others are treated and talked to. Minny, on the
other hand, takes care of Hilly’s mother, Miss Walters, while constantly being
scrutinized and put down every second by Hilly. Hilly is an awful woman who
treats Minny like dirt. Miss Walters seems to actually like Minny, treating her
with some respect. You get a good taste of how the book is going to go from the
first paragraph of the novel: spoken by Aibaleen, “MAE MOBLEY was born on a
early Sunday morning in August, 1960. A church baby we like to call it. Taking
care a white babies, thats what I do, along with all the cooking and the
cleaning. I done raised seventeen kids in my lifetime. I know how to get them
babies to sleep, stop crying, and go in the toilet bowl before they mamas even
get out a bed in the morning.”
This novel is very
touching, constantly making you want to keep reading. It just seems so real,
and makes you really think of putting yourself in someone else’s shoes and
imagining what life was like for women back then. I have never been so intrigued
in a book, never wanting to put it down. These woman spent all there time
raising other people’s children, when most had children of their own, along
with everything else that needed to be done in the house. I just can’t believe
that Stockett wrote this without thinking people would read it or that it was
even any good. She did an incredible job portraying something that is so
intense to try and talk about, because in today’s society, this topic is
something that people don’t want to remember, let alone speak about. I applaud
Kathryn Stockett tremendously.
Kisses From Katie
Kisses From Katie Review
A.P. Language
Ryan Niebruegge
Kisses From Katie, the life of Katie Davis, is about a teenage girl and her adventures in Uganda. During her senior year of high school, she confronted her parents about taking a gap year before she went to college to try and share the love of Jesus to people in a country that are less fortunate than she is. Her parents weren't very willing, so they told her she could go for Christmas break. Katie's parents were hoping this would make her change her mind about spending a whole year there, but her time in Uganda made her want to be there even more.As Katie's senior year was coming to an end, a man from an orphanage offered her a job as a kindergarten teacher. It didn't pay well, but he also gave her a place to stay. She left the comfort of her hometown, friends and family, and life of an upper-class citizen. Schooling in Uganda is very expensive for most people, but she was offering a cheap education, which resulted in having over one hundred students in her small classroom. But she managed, and fell in love with all the kids and decided she should start her own Ministry.
At the age of 19, Katie Davis started the Ministry Amazima, which means Truth in the main language of Uganda. Through this organization, she was sending kids from very broke families to school, using money raised in America, and she ended up buying her own house and adopting twelve little girls. She went to hospitals with these girls to feed the patients, and share the love of Jesus Christ. Through the last five years, she has shown so many children how much Jesus loves them, and has helped them through anything illnesses that have come across them.
The main purpose Katie had to wrote this, was to spread awareness of what she was doing. It was a great way to help get money for her organization and to help send kids to school. Katie says the kids of Uganda are who can change what it is like there. The best way to help the kids change their country is to send them to school. This is exactly what Katie is trying to achieve with the book; a better education for the future of Uganda. She is really doing great things there and deserves to have as much money for the children of Uganda as she can get her hands on.
I highly recommend this book. It is very inspirational and shows you that no matter what your age is, you can change the lives of so many people. The main writing style of Katie Davis was to make it just like her journal entries. At the end of each chapter, she would put an entry that related to the point of the chapter. This showed the reader what it must have been like living at that exact moment. She did a great job of showing what happened earlier on in her life, but with the journal entries, you could get into her head and see what she was feeling as these life changing events were happening.
All in all, this book is a great way to inspire the reader and to show there are people still doing good in our world. It shows that you can do these things as well, just to follow where you feel God is calling you to.
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