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Actions after the Loss of a Child in The Sportswriter by Richard Ford

2023-10-12 09:53:29

In the novel, Richard Ford 's sportswriter, mainly Frank Bass Cam. Frank is a divorced father of three children who lost Rei's syndrome of the first son a few years ago. After losing his son, Frank fell into a state of dream that made him act carelessly, and it ruined his marriage. He began to work and looked for something unrelated to his life and loss of his wife and son. He wishes to temporarily define himself for these women in a short time so as to forget their troubles.

"Sometimes we really do not become adults until they hit losses, catch up to a certain extent in life, being swept away like a wave, everything goes well," says Richard Ford in "Sports Journalist" It was. This is my 2011 year. Five years have passed since then, I have never forgotten the course that I taught. They made me to me like a recent failure, of course, my life's failure will be like this. As I wrote in the dark morning of the last day of 2016, America seems to be in danger of major failures, democracy, and our core value as a nation. As a country, as a state, as an idea, what will happen to us? No one knows. If we fail, we pray that we will not - we can only hope to learn, to grow, and then to gain meaning. God will help us all

Novelist Richard Ford, author of "Sports Journalist" and "Independence Day", is wrong in the results of the US elections. "This is not a bad thing, it's a creative stimulus.The fact that I am completely wrong about this is questionable of my country's understanding.This doubt makes me interested again." Robert McLull: Richard Ford is a novelist whose character lives in America 's "Red State". Frank Basschem, the protagonist of his novel "Sports Journalist" may not vote for Donald Trump, but he will know many middle aged white men. Ford is all Americans like his personality: he likes to shoot, hunt and debate. He is also enthusiastic instinctive liberal about the integrity of speech and thought and the freedom they can bring.

I think I talked to Richard Ford and his wife for about 15 to 20 minutes. She found a kind towel so I could dry my hands and face. Richard Ford and I have many things in common, or at least we imagined it was. We are all born in Mississippi. We are all interested in sports - my father is a football coach and Mr. Ford is a sports journalist. I spent most of the time I spent in Idaho, he lived in Montana State and wrote a book to Wyoming. I live in the French Quarter, and he and his wife are thinking about buying a house or renting a house there. He is the author of the short story "Communist" and I would like to be the author of such a story.