3-2-1 for “Ground Zero” (Berne), “The Hidden Life of Garbage” (Rogers) and “Once More to the Lake” (White)
[2023-01-31 22:20:07]
"Under the dry pine wreaths, banners, ribbons, stacked poetry and prayers, iron fence is almost invisible ..." There is no longer a fence-like image emphasizing me. It seems that it disappeared because all the memories covered it
2. The phrase "scent of the bedroom tree, smeared tree, scent entering from the screen" was highlighted in the image because the room I shot when I saw this picture was dark brown. Red wooden floor, open windows, bed. A wooden product suitable for the floor
My last sentence gives a good image, but that is the last sentence. When my father said: "When the belt suddenly suddenly bloated suddenly my groin area felt the chills of death" I, like my father was at his age, the time when my son is there Imagine that you enjoyed love and jumped into the water If you do the same thing, your father will feel sick and feel sick.
"This place seems to be a functioning machine." The term petroleum machine stands outstandingly for me. Because he said that even if it is killing the planet, landfill is going well. I can not understand why he explains the landfill using "oilfields".
My opinion about "returning to zero" is that it is very moving, but it is also very sad. I like how the author explains the scene and sets the mood. I thought that most of the content of this article was very beautiful but when I entered the sandwich shop it was almost impossible to understand why it was fair / jubilous.
My opinion on 'living hidden lives' made me very angry. I like to really recycle "environmentally friendly", how the landfill will work, and how people think they can fill them in with them. In order to know the influence of garbage on our planet, we think that people in the landfill should be seen. I think this is a great article as this is very convincing and people should know what's going on there.
My view of "I will go to the lake again" is fortunate but it is sad. I am very happy that he brought his son to the same lake as my father brought his father. Like my father 's picture, I also like my son. My father said he was dead, it made me sad. I really did not understand this meaning and title. Generally, I think that this article uses the most obvious language.
Heather Rogers's "Tomorrow passed: The trashful living of trash" can be seen in the history of recent trash. As we might guess, that is not what we always existed. Garbage is the focal point of economic, social and technical forces, usually hidden under the trash. Rogers' book is very attractive, taught, and amazing. It is well written, eagerly debated, and respectable. Rogers started with two introductions. In the first part, as you can imagine, I've listed a couple of general parameters on waste production. The second is to introduce garbage from the roadside to the final destination and define what Rogers calls "garbage flow". If you had these two measuring sticks, Rogers sneaked into her main story, it is the history of garbage.
Every day Americans throw an average of about 4.5 pounds of garbage. These wastes disappear like a magic the next morning, and in fact it ends in a remote landfill. In Heather Rogers' s "Hidden Hidden Life", Rogers explained how to throw away garbage and throw it away. She believes that accumulation of garbage is harmful to the environment. In her article she uses word selection, figurative language and sentence structure to account for damage in these modern landfills.