Thinking about the hard times of World War II, famine and poverty stricken, broken lives, husbands and fathers being sent overseas with the mere possibility of never seeing their families again. Taking on another twist, during World War II, it was a time of sexual experimentation and loosing of the overall morale of people. It was a time of conflict and emotions, sacrifice, and a time of discovery. Men and women alike, the Great Depression and the war disrupted lives. Times were hard and money was even harder to come by. Great lengths were taken to preserve their lives. In the book “Thanks for the Memories: Love, Sex, and World War II,” the author Jane Leder explains the social and sexual experiences of groups of people, and what it was like to be young in the 1940’s, with a world at war and lives uprooted. Jane Leder began her journey as a writer after she was an English teacher for many years. She started her career as a newspaper reporter then as a writer/producer of educational materials. Her curiosity about how ordinary people reacting to extraordinary times and conditions drove her to writing from the start. In the book, there are stories from people who lived through this time and how they dealt with it. Leder tells a story of a young couple courtship between Betty Lou and George Rarey who had a brief but truly passionate marriage, which was separated by the war and his time in the service. George was a fighter pilot in Nazi Germany, eventually leading to his plane
It was during these next few months that Martha tried to use the addition and subtraction that she had unwillingingly been taught as a child. After noticing losses in sales, Martha was willing to get help. During the nine months after her husband’s death she met and enjoyed the company of General George Washington, introduced by friends. Both found each had experienced loss, Martha, her Daniel and George, his brother. After their first meeting Martha, was very interested in getting to know George better. She even sent one of her servants to help him cross the river on his way to visit her. George and Martha became engaged just nine months after Daniel’s death. Jacky and Patty warmed to George
Susan Beth Pfeffer decided that she wanted to be a writer when her father dedicated the law book he was writing to his daughter. Right then and there she wrote her first little story about the love between a pair of scissors and an Oreo cookie. Her childhood experiences form the basis of her writing, seeing that she grew up in the suburbs in New York. This explains why most of her books focus on young people growing up in the suburbs. Pfeffer went on to New York University. After getting her degree in radio, television, and motion pictures she started a writing course and her first novel Just Morgan was published. Throughout her life she has published more than 75 books and some of them include: A Year without Michael, Devils Den, Life as We Knew it and Family of Strangers. The themes of her books usually include emotional problems, divorce, historical fiction, and people having fantasies of modeling/acting. Her science fiction stories contain apocalyptic futuristic events like her novel Life as We Knew it.
“Silence. These were the habits that I wore as I lived what survivors of the Holocaust now call a U-boat, a Jewish fugitive from the Nazi death machine, hiding right in heat of the Third Reich.” With these words, Edith Hahn lays down the foundation for her captivating memoir. Born in Vienna, Austria in 1914, Edith Hahn was a Jewish girl who strived to go further in the education and not become a housewife. Despite her hopes and dreams, at the age of 27, and only one test away from achieving her law degree, Edith was turned away from her University due to the rules set up by Hitler and the Reich during the Anschluß. As they are witnessing the Nazi rise to power, Edith's sibling, all but her, leave. One sister takes refuge in Israel, and her brother in England. From then on, Edith and her mother were stripped of their home and forced to live in the slowly degrading conditions of the Jewish ghetto.
She worked her whole youth by studying and trying to get her family stable, none of this was in vain; she became an author.
What I learned about my author Beverly Cleary, I never knew who inspired her to write. Most people would say family inspired their nieces,nephews,and any kind of family but someone else inspired her to write. It was her middle school librarian. Beverly got told by her librarian and her english teacher that one day she should be a writer. Now that's usually not normal for someone in Beverly's life to inspire her so much but she did. Beverly had two twins and then she lost her husband a few years later.
Prostitution rarely ever seems to be a talking point among World War I historians. Many under the impression that discussion about such topics regarding life behind the front detracts from what happened during combat. However, this interpretation of history is rather unsettling since it silences a tremendous portion of WWI from readers who wish to understand more about its impacts on the life of soldiers and society. Wars are fought by people, therefore, they should be written about as such, rather than simply cannon fodder or a statistic for a particular battle. When we see a person, rather than a number, the impact of historical events hold much larger significance to us than they previously did before. Now, prostitution may not necessarily
O 'Brien illustrates to us the necessity for each man to be connected to their old life, telling a story of Mark Fossie flying in his girlfriend to ease his loneliness (104-05). Each soldier found himself facing insurmountable barriers throughout the war, and these small effects and coping mechanisms were often the only necessity that would give them reason to return home again. They needed personal methods of coping with the war, and this primeval survival was the only way to remain a man.
Erdrich later went to school for creative writing and began her publishing career. Many of her stories can be traced back to
Katrina went to college at the University of Florida. Her professors told her that she had “a way with words.” So then she began to dream about becoming a writer, telling stories for a living was what she wanted. Katrina wandered around from job to job. Such as selling tickets at Circus World, planting philodendrons in a greenhouse, calling bingo at a campground, running rides at an amusement park -- and the whole time, she talked incessantly about being a writer and reading books. At the age of 29 Katrina had an epiphany. She realized that she could spend all her life dreaming or she could follow her dream. So Katrina thought very seriously about what it takes to be a writer. She came to a conclusion the one thing that is required is writing.
Rose claims that when people discussed the war they choose to focus on stories that helped the population feel good, rather than talking about the horrors of the war. World War II seemed to generate higher levels of patriotism than ever before seen. Rose hopes to give true honor to the Americans of this generation in his book. Not by elaborating on their contributions, but by trying to paint a picture of what life was like while America was at war. Rose chose to rely on first-hand accounts of the men and women who actually experienced the war. He does this to give them credit, but also to show that the so-called Greatest Generation was not without its own problems and flaws. He shows that they were just another regular generation who lived through tough times that tested their character and will power.
experienced. They were free to be naked and enjoy the flesh without shame. Jack Capps says
By letting her decide the characters in her story, the setting, the problem and the solution she wrote about characters that she knew and used vocabulary that she was familiar with.
of why she's apprehensive of the books, other than that because the society says she should be.
time period was not easy for many because of how demanding the work was and how little many
Just like any author she achieves storytelling in a simple and straight forward manner. Some of