The Other Wes Moore is a story around a pair of young individuals with indistinguishable and as well as practically identical lives, encountering adolescence in the same city. Honestly, at first look, the audience might be obliged to see these young fellows as the same, and contemplate what made their lives to twist up so in a startling way. To that extent the story is straightforward, but the two young individuals had one vital complication that drastically affected their destinies. The (Author) Wes Moore shows that in the novel, if kids don't have strong parental figures, the majority of them will not be successful in life.
There are a few of examples in which the "other" Wes' mother, Mary, does not give the guidance that her son so wildly needed when he was a teenger. By no telling him the consequences of being reckless. The “other” Wes came back to his home clearly intoxicated. Mary and her beau accept that the “other” Wes' state is fascinating, and they mocked. According to the novel, “Mary laughed, watching him squirm. ‘Well, at least now you know how bad it feels and you will stay away from drinking,’ she said” (Moore 62). As opposed to giving some kind of education, or in spite of sitting Wes down and bantering with him about
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Ignoring Wes' drug use was a neglectfulness on Mary's part, since she was calm about it and gave the “other” Wes the endorsement to continue. Mary could have at any rate attempted to deal with this issue by bantering with Wes, and tell him about the consequences of his occupation. Mary could have gotten to the base of Wes' motivations for consequences for drug use, and let him think about a couple of alternatives. Or maybe, she holds until it is much past the final turning point, and by then she genuinely can't have any sort of impact in her
The book The Other Wes Moore is a book that is mainly about choices and their effects. The two characters had very similar childhoods, yet one became a criminal and the other was extremely successful. This book helped me understand that choices we make, even small ones, can greatly affect our future. An example of this was on page 100, the author writes that “The news of imminent parenthood did not stop Wes from making time for other girls.” This leads to Wes having several more children.
Wes Moore and the “Other” Wes Moore “Young boys are more likely to believe in themselves if they know there's someone, somewhere, who shares that belief.” Two kids grew up in the same city, with the same name, which is Wes Moore. The both had many similarities and differences. They both grew up fatherless. They both had hated many similar experiences.
The Other Wes Moore is a story about the lives of two people with the same name, but it seems as though each of them has been led down a different path. They started out in similar situations, made good and bad decisions, had decisions made for them, and some way, somehow, one Wes Moore overcame all the difficulties while the other Wes Moore now has to live a life of difficulty in prison. The book is told in first person point of view by the Wes Moore that overcome life 's difficulties. In the Baltimore Sun, they ran a newspaper about the author and how he received the Rhodes Scholarship. In the very same newspaper, series of articles were ran about the other Wes Moore stating that the police were trying to locate him on charges of robbery and
After having his first child the other Wes Moore had been missing school, and later dropped out. Having a child put a lot of strain on the other Wes Moore. And without a high school diploma and a criminal record it would be nearly impossible for Wes to find a job. For the time being, however, Wes was able to stay with his aunt Nicey. Nicey told him “to either get a job or go to school” (110).
Two men have the same name, with completely different lives and futures. The Other Wes Moore is about two men with the same name but completely experiences in life. The author Wes goes into military school which changes his life. The “other” Wes stays in the drug business and ends up in prison. The Similarities and Differences pertaining to Family Life and role models of both Moores were described in The Other Wes Moore.
They both were failing,“ Disappointed with D’s pleasantly satisfied with C’s and celebratory about a B, I allowed my standards at school to become pathetic”(Moore 54). Wes decided that he was just giving up on school. He started to skip school too. They both went to different school and they were way different. Wes went the private school.
Then, as Wes puts it "My mother saw Riverdale as a haven, a place where I could escape my neighborhood and open my horizons. But for me, it was where I got lost” (48). In other words, he is saying his mother was determined that no matter how much the world around them seemed ready to crumble, she would definitely able to see him going through it. She wanted him to enter in the Riverdale School to get a better education molding his academic level but he refused to get in
How is it that two men that come from identical backgrounds end up being completely opposites? Wes Moore takes us back to his childhood growing up, and also introduces us to a character sharing the same name as him, and similarly, the same lifestyle. Both of the young men shared the absence of a father figure, living in poor neighborhoods, bad influences, and lack of education. While reading, we question “how?” and “why?”
And both Moores had positive and negative social influences. This essay by now established the influence family members can make in a person’s life, and in TOWM, family influence is a major key. Both Wes’ were influenced by at least one family member and respectively shaped the people they became. Similarly, the boys had friends who impacted them positively and negatively. When the author Wes started attending Riverdale all the students around him were white, therefore, he felt left out.
In the afterword the author talks about some of the speculations people have as to why Wes 1 and Wes 2 ended up so different. Naturally, the question of genetics and nature always comes up as an explanation for the defining difference between the two Wes Moores. On the other hand, certain points in the nature/upbringing of the two Wes Moores, such as Wes 2’s parents neglecting birth control, were speculated as the defining reason for the outcomes of the two Wes Moores. The author emphasizes that all these factors are actually woven together (Moore, 183). Similarly, the concepts of nature and nurture are closely meshed in the field of psychology (Textbook, 73).
The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates is a New York Times Bestseller by none other than, Wes Moore. This novel features an intriguing tale of two boys who grew up under the same circumstances, under the same names, and with the same chances; and yet one manages to become a Rhodes Scholar, decorated combat veteran, White House Fellow, and business leader while the other grew up heisting and selling drugs until he received a life sentence for felony murder after shooting a police officer. The more successful Wes Moore, Wes Moore, began to visit the less successful Wes Moore, the other Wes Moore, during his prison sentence in order to write the book. Furthermore, the book turned out to be great.
Wesley's mom Mary wanted her son to succeed but she never gave him a reason to. On the other hand, Westley's mom Joy wanted the very best for him, and she decided to enlist her parents to help raise her kids. Also, Mary didn't care if Wes did good in school because her school career wasn't the best. Joy wan her Wes to be the most educated he could be. She not only got to go to college, but she finished with a degree.
1) I believe that Moore, the author, is trying to say that the second chance is trying to rewrite the first mistake and the last chance could be your last chance. The author’s last chance to stop his drug dealing was when he was sent to military school. His temper against his mother, bad grades, absences from classes and an incident with a smoke bomb were the reasons his mother sent him to military school. (Moore 87) The “other” Wes had the decision to stop selling drugs while raising his family.
Christopher starts out by acting as Aspergers controls him. Christopher runs away from social interaction and communication. He goes on to challenge his Aspergers when he finds out that his father has been lying to him his whole life about his mother being dead. In the end Christopher sees the real world for what it is and doesn’t shelter himself through it. This makes the novel the perfect story the theme of coming of age.