The second Moore is sentenced to life imprisonment and plans to spend the rest of his life in prison to kill policemen during robbery. The most tragic thing is that this may be the life of the author (Moore, 2011, p.xi). By referring to these words, the author definitely says that something forms two destinies and destiny, one child eventually becomes a criminal and the other becomes a scholar I understand. Two men grew up in the same community of the Baltimore community; an area full of poverty, deviation and crime.
"Wes Moore" by Wes Moore is a nonfiction novel about two children - they were born in Baltimore in the late 1970s, they all grew up in the same city which is Wes Moore. Basically, The Other Wes Moore is actually about other Wes Moore and writer Wes Moore, and about how they become people today. However, their similar childhood did not lead to a similar future. The writer Wes Moore has been very successful, especially when I saw his origin. He is widely recognized as a scholar of Rhodes, a researcher at White House, a decorative veteran, and a powerful business leader. Wes Moore was interested in the story of other Wes Moore in 2000, and other Wes were sentenced to prison in connection with robbery. It imagines the way Wesemore is able to finish it just as easily. His most important sentence to The Other Wes Moore, "The cold truth is that his story may be my story.
The author of WesMoor survived the struggle of his family who graduated from college, fought in Afghanistan, and served as a researcher at the White House. However, after reading other Wes Moore, he suffered from the mirror image version of his home, and those who were almost identical would eventually be sentenced. Moore wrote a letter to a young man with the same name and history, eventually visiting him in prison. "Other Wes Moore", he talks about their story. He will not make excuses for the charges of other parties nor hurt his own laws. What he did was how easy it was to lose his success and ultimately how to show the freedom of the other Weiss. "The cold truth is that his story may be my story, tragedy is that my story may be his story," Moore wrote in a preface.