Terry Tempest Williams's "Single Female Family" In our present society believes believe equals blindly accepting everything that a church or facility represents. Faith is still seen as a healthy feature, which is related to increasingly negative implications, but is this implication often associated with a non-thoughtive and dogmatic approach? Absolute obedience of all principles regardless of conscious thoughts or appeals. Similarly, patriotism is a model of modern faith. That is because it requires undoubted compliance with the laws of the government and its irrational behavior, especially during wartime.
A 34 - year - old Mormon female living in Salt Lake City, Utah and naturalist Terry Tempest Williams thinks of himself as a member of the "family of women". In her family there are ten women who received treatment or breast cancer, including Williams. Is this just an example of natural randomness or is it related to the "almost unmanned" plain where Williams and his family lived in the atomic bomb experiment site between 1951 and 1962? When her book began, Williams' mother was just diagnosed with ovarian cancer This book is talking about her life and death in the next five years. At the same time, the Great Salt Lake rises to record height and floods the Xionghe migratory bird reserve, so that Williams will divert the living birds and animals.
Terry Tempest Williams is the author of 'Shelter: The unnatural history of family and place' including this biographical article. Williams uses natural themes throughout the writing process to connect with people. In 'Single Female Family', she uses her own statistics and facts and details of her family's breast cancer history to see how events in the environment occur over a long period, often unexpected events I will explore. She first introduced her cancer history. This was also true for her Mormon family who statistically had a low incidence of cancer worldwide and only one of whom had cancer suffered before 1960 for her personal family history.
Obviously, there seems to be a lack of important data in evaluating cancer and leukemia-related deaths in women affected by such nuclear weapons. Terry Yanster Williams (1981; 2001), an environmental activist and writer, depicts the battle with her own family breast cancer in "Exile: Unnatural Family and Regional History". After reviewing her mother's fatal breast cancer, she gave a conclusion with this unforgettable reality: "I belong to a single female family, my mother, my grandmother and 6 people My aunt undergoes mastectomy I have my own problem; a small tumor between two breast cancer biopsies and ribs has been diagnosed as "severe malignancy" (Tempest Williams, 1981; 2001, p. 281). When I first read this chapter, I acknowledged that many tears are flowing in the plane above the Rocky Mountains.