The crispy Autumn air was in New york city as many people roam the streets. In the past many people would have been scared to walk outside their homes. Usually it was the purple dragons causing the dangerous accidents in the streets but then people soon realise gangs is not their only problem. Dangerous mutants that came from children nightmares came to life and was 10x more dangerous than the simple purple dragons. Some was worse the others but humans soon realise their life was not so simple. However the Big Apple seem to once again in peace, many people just acted like the danger of before was just a bad dream. So many people acted like it didn't even happen. To the knowledge of four huge talking turtles, many humans fiends and non- human friends, this peace period …show more content…
However 18 whole years the family has survived any danger that came their way. Many tears,blood and lives was loose but it was all worth it. Seeing the smiles and laughter that was happening right now. Splinter couldn't help but chuckle as he thought of how much his sons grown up. After the battle with shredder and many other enemies, the turtles had become bored. So there all decision to try and get jobs, which was actually easier than they thought it be. Michelangelo the “youngest” of the four turtles seem to have mature more than the others. Mr. Murakami has alone Mikey to stay after store hours to clean up and protect him against anyone who wanted to harm the blind chef. In reward he been teaching Mikey how to improve his cooking become a “Ninja with food”. Splinter always knew if Mikey put his mind to it, he could do anything. Mikey quickly become a gold student with his cooking. Once a week on tuesdays Mikey even cooks for the children. Since the kids are half price on that day and they all love the turtle chef cooking for them. Doing backflips and fighting make believe enemies as they eat. Mikey even helps with the money and business of the japanese
Eventually the turtle is able to right itself and continue on its path. This detailed account of the turtle 's journey could be an elaborate metaphor.
Ngoc Le Nagel ENGL 99 - Paper 1 Jan 18, 2017 True Charity According to America Now (2015), the eleventh edition, composed by Robert Atwan, Jacob Riis was a Danish immigrant; he later became a reporter and a pioneering photographer who focused on social issues, primarily poverty. Riis has also written many influential books based on this topic. One of these books’ short introduction was made into the essay “From How the Other Half Lives” featured in America Now (2015), which explains the reasons behind the increase in poverty and crime. Jacob Riis believed that the underlying cause was the neglect and ignorance of the rich towards the poor.
In a random market people were merry, maybe not all, but on an average merry. Then there was a sudden blackout, then back to normal. People couldn't quite put a finger on it but something changed. And as carefree humans are no one thought much about it, On with our merry lives. Then a sudden tremor and a deafening boom, shook everything.
Now throughout the duration of reading Anderson’s story of the inner-city in Philadelphia, one can learn and think a lot through the journey. Reading this book made me feel like I was actually visiting the city or walking through each street that was being explained about. Each different aspect of life, such as, school, family, crime or even relationships made me contrast the different lifestyles they had compared to the lifestyle that I associate with. Even the explanation of the code’s regulation through the way of talking, dress style, behavior or simple etiquette of eye contact specified enough detail, that it was easy enough to easily picture or imagine. It was thought-provoking to read about how Anderson was able to uncover the confrontations
For many of them, it was the first time they had ever seen one. For the others it had still been a very long time. They walked into the city. It was dark, had a horrid stench, and was dark everywhere.
The author feels that the street makes people violent; for example, the character Jones is shown to have turned violent after he works in cellars of buildings without human contact. Petry continues to reference “it” throughout this scene, mentioning that “it did everything it could do to discourage the people walking along the street” (2). The wind is now pushing people back, and hindering them from moving forward, or symbolically from moving up in life and gaining a better class or higher wage. Petry feels that someone, particularly white people and those in the middle class, are preventing lower class, which is majority black people, from moving up and escaping poverty. The
Students will also be provided with markers and crayons to add any addition designs. Students will also be provided with jewels in order to make their fish or turtle sparkle! We will staple the legs and head of the turtles, as well as the fins of the fish for
Even when things get rough, the Youngers still remain a close family throughout the story, supporting each other through most
But few people admired them. They were just more bad weather and more bad gravity that families endured from time to time.” (130) The depiction of post-flu Manhattan shows a world in which hierarchy is nearly meaningless, with many people actually wanting to be slaves, and the equality of almost everyone in the post-flu Manhattan society. Despite this, the protagonist is still called the “King of Candlesticks” a position with no power.
The settings of a family which has a negative effect on family and boys. Mainly what the characters are inclined to do against each other, the dysfunctional family life and the one parent family. The story has increased my knowledge about gangs and the impact on boys, that positivity of one person is better than the adversity of a gang. The author Scott Monk message to boys is being in a gang, especially a criminal gang is a futile, it is informative in regards that boys can do positive things in their life, that the need to turn their back on gangs and violence.
The peaceful suburban community transforms into a bloodthirsty mob of monsters, all because they are scared of a mere possibility. Fear drives them into a spiral. Neighbors blamed other neighbors for the outage because they believed one person was an alien. Even though they had no proof or
Geoffrey Canada does an excellent job of bringing his readers to the streets of the South Bronx and making them understand the culture and code of growing up in a poor, New York City neighborhood in the ‘50s and ‘60s. In his book, Fist, Stick, Knife, Gun, Canada details, through his own childhood experiences, the progression of violence in poverty plagued neighborhoods across America over the last 50 years. From learning to be “brave” by being forced to fight his best friend on a sidewalk at six-years-old, to staring down an enraged, knife wielding, “outsider” with nothing to defend himself but nerve, Canada explains the nightmare of fear that tens of thousands of children live through every day growing up in poor neighborhoods. The book
Noah Giansanti Ms. Wiz British Literature June 2, 2023 The Mentor Throughout many different stories many different styles of characters can be seen and observed. Characterized by how they act and what role they play in their respective story. One of these styles, better known as an archetype, is the mentor.
You try everything you can to escape, but you know you can’t. The lions are right there, at least a foot away from you, with an evil look of murder in their eyes, and that’s the last thing you remember. This is what happens to the main protagonists in Ray Bradbury 's dystopian story, “The Veldt”. The story takes place in the future and it focuses on the dysfunctional Hadley family. The children, Peter and Wendy, are obsessed with their magical nursery, where everything is seemingly real, including an African landscape with wild animals.
Rival gangbangers were fighting and harming each other. Everyone who was at the park ran because they were still