OUTEAST Sadie Jones put his hands on a cold glass window. I feel he is far away. He imagined placing his fist through it, a jagged hole in the windowpane, and a glass point still attached to the tree. He pulled his wrist and arm towards them and imagined that they would cut his body. I do not think that he has this feeling. He put his face in the glass and imagined that all debris would cut him. He stopped thinking with his eyes closed, but it was the same, imagining that the glass entered him and needed to do so.
After reading Sadie Jones' s novel "The Wanderer", I had overwhelming hope for me. At a certain level, I am very sad about this book. This book saw a boy who failed to rescue her mother during World War II drowned in the river. The boy must deal with a distant father who can not establish a relationship with him. His friends and family rejected him, and whatever he did he was always pushed to the ground. In a sense, the father accused the boy completely for his mother 's death. On the other hand, there is hope. The boy was dismissed and eventually imprisoned, but through this experience he came out, in particular succeeded in reconnecting to the world, and then contacted himself.
In January 1880, Elmer J. McCurdy was born to a 17-year-old unmarried mother, Sadie McCurdy in Washington, Maine. His father is not known yet, but it may be a cousin who lives in Charles Davis, McDie family. Sadie's eldest son George and his wife Helen adopted Elmar and considered him himself. When George died in consumption in 1890, Sady took over the care of Elmer. Regardless of whether Irish prejudice is avoided, Elmer went west to Kansas in the name of West Forgis Curtis in 1903. Elmer was working as a plumber named Frank Curtis in Iola, Kansas and also as a miner of Elmer McCurdy in Weber, Missouri. In 1907, Elmer enlisted in his own name.
I remembered my grandmother Sady who was born in the 1890s. She is an immigrant from Russia, 17 years old mother. She told me that she had learned everything she needs to know from Anna in law. Anna shows how to help Saddie (at home) give birth, care (on a regular basis), and teaches how to train her five children (a tough hand). Sadie did anything what Anna told her and then Sadie helped my mother Rachel - also immigrants - to do the same for me and my two brothers and sisters. When Dr. Spock published his first book on parenting before my brother, I entered the world but my mother relied on the wisdom of moving from Anna to Sadie than her new popularity . What a child supports with that concept - Feed the literary work of the day