A culturally rich experience of finding a homecoming angel is an experience related to artistic and intellectual activities that makes you a better person or makes you feel like you are a better person. In addition, a culturally rich experience is when you allow yourself to become more educated about the topic and to self-improve. I think drama brings rich cultural experiences to people through drama. By sitting in the audience and participating in the drama, we can make ourselves the role of the stage.
American novelist Thomas Wolfe wrote in his 1929 novel "Looking for Homes, Angels": "We are exiled by myself." In her dark womb, we I do not know the face of my mother In prison, we can not understand in the world and have entered an incomprehensible prison ... Is not one of us a strange stranger or a single person? "Having a friend People are not aware that they are not strangers, they are isolated in terms of social invisibility.As I wrote articles about depression, some of these people gave me advice I asked for the reality of their desolate painful devastation, without cushioning of love, "A woman named Claudia Weaver told me" I am very unhappy, I guess it can not be said to anyone " . "I avoided this world"
I have read Thomas Wolff, Winston Churchill's "Party Storm", "Looking for Home", "Angels" books. I guess it will pull me towards it like sex. For me, reading is always the same with the precision of close contact with me. So far individuals are not familiar with it. I have never read the horse's book, so I can not be a small woman. There is a book about dead boy, but I am afraid to complete it. I think reading was done elsewhere, probably in Berkeley, where did the baby come from? Cal has been to our school with our parents and grandparents. That distant town where I was born is like a fairytale. I thought that you were going to find the person you married.
During high school, teachers alert, I noticed that boys were increasing the time to read Zane Gray's Western drama and that Zane Gray was much lower than boys' prosperous intelligence. Homosexuals believe this gift is the turning point in his life: Wolff's novel ignited his core; it provides the insight he can make, and his writing life It is not a drunken dream. Along with J. T. Farrel's Stud Lonigan, Wolf's Look Home Word, Angel is a typical American novel whose experience, growth, and families create good and evil hearts. Even though they lack privilege and upset, it gives gay confidence in saying his own experience and experience, these experiences are valuable information. Wolf shone on the green lantern at the edge of the dock; O'Connor and Faulkner offered him a boat to get there.