Essay sample library > Lost and Found by: Anne Schraff

Lost and Found by: Anne Schraff

2023-09-12 06:22:46

Family dynamics is the theme of this story. This story shows how people's decisions affect the whole family. I see how human problems may cause problems for others.

The story is told in a first person perspective. I think that Darcy called himself "me" and "me."

Darcy Willis had a big problem. Now, she does not know where to ask for help. First, there is a suspicious stranger after her. Next, she left intimidation notes on her desk. Now her sister disappeared. Darcy has to take action to save her sister and her weak position family to be too late

Even though my parents were still married, the fathers of Jamee and Darcy went to New York with a 24 year old woman when they were young. Their father is not satisfied with this relationship. Another conflict of the story is that Jamie flees from the house as she is not satisfied with all the problems that are happening.

I personally do not recommend this book to my friends. I do not think they will be interested in this. My friend is reading a book that is different from mine. This book is not suitable for my friends.

Award-winning writer Anne Schraff published the first book in his teens. When I was young, I knew the love to write, I took advantage of my personal experience and gained inspiration from the racial discrimination of the 1950s. He received a bachelor's and master's degree from California State University in Northridge. Before deciding to write in full time, she was a high school teacher in San Diego. Living in the era of ethnic conflict gave her an indelible impression that kept her inspiration

Excluding comprehensive information from various sources, Schraff provides a readable and objective view of the decade that the US will change forever. She summarized the "storm cloud" of the disaster that gathered in the late 1920s and immediately represented them as a stock market crash in 1929. (In this chapter, Schlaf erroneously regarded Oklahoma Will Rogers as Indiana.) Collapse, deepening of melancholy, collapse of bonus troops, election of Franklin Roosevelt - concise and sufficient detail - discussions about New Deal and its heritage It got excited. Especially interesting and useful is the chapter on ethnic minorities in the Depression. This book complements the older and longer Great Depression

I am welcomed by Arenson and Schraff's article "The End of the Western War" as Westerners are often fascinated by the distance between our shores and the majority of the great events that make up American history. Alternatively, I welcome the idea of ​​such an article; the article actually written makes me urticaria. Positive voice and proprietary rights create a clearer prose. "Richmond's Hope" uses two words (the two words Richmond wants) to obscure the intended meaning, and the reader seems to the reader whether Richmond's hope is similar to "Elrond's Parliament" I will do. The same thing should be familiar. In addition, due to the use of soft verbs, "export of the Pacific" is very embarrassing. "Acquisition" will be more powerful than "Owned". Or, in simplistic terms, "It will ruin Richmond's expectations for the Pacific routes."