"Over the years I've never talked to anyone about this, I have never told one thing to my parents, teachers, classmates" (Rodriguez 623). There was a tremor when I read it - this is the most powerful sentence I have ever encountered. Fear, confusion, indignation, I closed the book. Silence is confronting me. Neither a whispering nor a murm - I could not hear anything. I am alone. The dim room was too dark, and the light was too dark. Anxiety and fear I looked at the bed and looked at the night sky. Not a star - just an infinite dark space.
The important difference between personal narratives and memoirs is that personal narratives usually cover a single event and memoirs cover multiple events on a single topic. The personal story communicates stories of the life of the narrator, including his experiences, thoughts, emotions, and reflections, and memoirs contain information beyond this scope, including the direct knowledge and experience of the talker. Therefore, personal stories are also memoirs, but memoirs are not necessarily personal stories.
This is a story about a woman who goes to Tuscany, going to Spain, Portugal, France, British Isles, Turkey, and North Africa. She shares reviews with her about anecdotes, art, architecture, history, landscape, society, and cooking traditions. "In 1986, my classmate Claire Van Houten and I decided to pack backpacks all over the world for one year," Gilman told this memoir about two young women and the crisis they faced while traveling in China I have written. "Of course, we do not know how complex the world is, where we are, or what we are suffering from."
The theme of attribution is very common in this story, and if there is a frank discussion of people who evacuated politically, it can not be ignored. The idea that refugees are looking for houses away from their home is not necessarily the case. Relocation may be necessary in some cases. They endanger their lives and renounce the need for their home, family and identity. Bora emphasizes the reality faced by refugees (usually immigrants) when threatened by banishment. Whenever Father Papa visits a transport inspector, I am always worried. When the police came to the house of Ntanga's house and Mami was concerned about the worst situation, it also showed the same fear. The symbolic meaning of their authority brought about a confusing understanding of their undocumented living in foreign lands. Their uncertainties of exile positions prevented Mami and Dad from speaking to their children, Jean and Mary who are also refugees.