Chocolate War Many people often encounter various roles of praise or contempt in literature and life. They summarize whether these roles are good or bad, and are contemplating the selection and responsibility of these roles. In the chocolate war, I enjoyed Roland Goo Bert or Goo Bar based on his behavior. I despised Archie Costello (The Vigner's designation) for his choice and his actions. I really appreciate the most important characters among all the characters of Roland Goubert (The Goober).
Consistent Results in the Chocolate War Robert Coimia's "Chocolate War" represents a theme of compliance or non-compliance. The chocolate war was first announced in 1974, but this theme also applies to today's young people. This novel is eternal. Because teenagers are always confronted with whether they are faithful or whether they will meet the expectations of others. In response to this theme, David Peck says: "What happened to this idea ... that rule will have a social impact on all people, if people face social impacts such as collective pressure, by changing most of their behavior Consistent behavior, thought, and expected way of deciding Whether a person satisfies the choice of one's own majority or socially acceptable action plan
One of Robert Comil's best-selling novels is "Chocolate Wars". His own son affected the novel; his son refused to participate in the sale of chocolate at his school. The chocolate war was about a boy called Jerry Reynold, who attended Trinity, a Catholic school of all Catholic churches. Every year, the school sells chocolate as a fundraising activity. Jerry refused to sell chocolate for 10 days as homework for the respected high school gang "The Vigils" homework. Even after 10 days, Jerry still seems to refuse to sell chocolate. Jerry is more than just a freshman, hero of many people who insist on his beliefs, and many students are beginning to realize this. This book continues to show that life is not always as planned, but in whatever circumstances you still should not give up