The process of finding who is who is very confusing and confusing. By growing, people experience different changes in personality, deciding who they are and what they want to be. A small girl from David Kaplan's "Doe Season" experienced one of these changes, and many other teenagers were confused about these changes, and no matter how difficult it was to find a person's identity I understood that certain aspects can not be changed. She tried. Andy is a 9 year old girl and does not want to grow up becoming a woman.
My short story "Doe Season" written by David Michael Kaplan is my analysis. "Doe Season" is about a young, innocent girl named "Andy" hunting with her father, his friend "Charlie Spreun", and his 11 year old son "Mac" . At the beginning of the story, she prayed that they would get a deer. Throughout the story, the narrator talks about Andy's past experiences. Narrator also mentioned her actual experience on hunting trips as well as asking if the Mac saw it "(penis). When a little boy told her when the process called "hog addressing" was in progress (I do not know how cruel hunting is a cruel hunting), they sometimes cut off the "it" of the deer. When I got an opportunity to shoot a deer, she wanted it to escape and I wondered why it did not. She shot it, but she ran away. She can not believe what she has done and can not sleep.
Therefore, Christmas Day 12 does not end at Christmas, and the advent ends. Instead, it ends on Epiphany 12th from Christmas. This past 12 days is sometimes called Christmastide. The following episode "Season" continued from January 6 until the day before being lent. Some Latin American and European cultures have been extended by the light of the candle until February 2 this season or this season. Episode is a Greek word meaning performance, appearance or expression. Historically, Epiphany began at the eastern church as a festival of the birth of Jesus Christ. As the Christmas celebration spreads to the east, Epiphany changed its present meaning. Ironically, in the year Chanukah duplicated Christmastide, Epiphany became very close to Chanukah. Hanukkah's historical villain reminds us of Epiphanes IV of Antiochus, or "Antiochus, God has accomplished it".