Every year nearly 750,000 teenagers get pregnant between the ages of 17 and 19. In Nicole Filmore’s “Knocked Up”, a seventeen year-old girl has just joined the statistics. As the months pass by the girl becomes increasingly pampered. Her sister on the other hand, the good girl she is, has stayed away from the alleged painful world of sex and gets stuck with extra chores.
In Michael Melhorn’s “The O” a young boy’s favorite place to be turns out to be full of lies and corruption. His happy place is a theme park near his house. When he finally turned 16, he hastily applied for a job there. Unfortunately, reality really is a slap in the face. The longer he works there the more he finds that the entire park is corrupt. “The hot seat” is a single seat on many of the roller coasters that is used to knock off any employee who was close to attaining the CEO position. Michael Melhorn devises a plan to expose the park and eventually becomes CEO.
Frank F. Mathias was a World War 2 veteran. He was a soldier from the frontlines, in no way special. That’s right, he was your Average Joe of the war scene. He made a comparison between a memoirist and a historian. A memoirist writes about himself, unlike the historian who writes of past events in no way related to his life. The historian’s information must be credible while a memoirist writes on past experience. The memoirist may stretch the truth to turn up the heat.
The SAC narratives are stories from the survivors of the hurricane Katrina disaster. The narrative I found to be most depressing was “Katrina Homecoming”. In the story Janay Barconey leaves a vivid image in your mind of what it would be like to live through a disaster like Katrina. The aftermath of the disaster is worse than the actual event. “At least 10,000 people are going to die.” The people are stranded.” These fragments of news reports filled the mind of the young girl as she and her family searched for her home. It is at that time that all hope seems lost. Sometimes it takes a disaster of this magnitude for people the fully comprehend the value of human life and the luxuries we are provided.
When I read “Knocked Up” I felt as if I was a member of the family. The situations presented in the story and the way they are presented make you subconsciously make the same decisions the family members are making.
When I read “The O” I felt pity for the narrator. To him, the theme park was a glorious and safe place. His excitement was crushed by the corrupt operations that took place in secrecy.
I agree very much with Frank Methias. I feel that a memoirist is very different from a historian. A memoirist is expected to imply his feelings when he writes. Historians blankly transfer information and to write with a lack of compassion.
The SAC narratives were very depressing to read. Because I lived through the disaster I knew of the tragic events that took place but I never came across any information that depicted an image quite as clear as the image I retained from reading “Katrina Homecoming”.