Messages Revealed in Annie Dillard's, An American Childhood

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In An American Childhood by Annie Dillard, Dillard reminisces on her many adventures throughout her childhood living in Pittsburgh. Her stories explain her school, her home life, her family, and growing up. Dillard also talks about changes in her life, and how they affect her, and how she felt about others around her. One’s childhood is a crucial part of life, because it’s a time of learning more than any other time of life. Childhood is a time of curiosity and realization. What you learn in your childhood has a big impact on how you make decisions and act as an adult. One message that I found while reading An American Childhood is that life is sometimes not what it seems. Annie Dillard explained this concept when she said, “The interior life is often stupid. Its egoism blinds it and deafens it, its imagination spins out ignorant tales, fascinated…The trick of reason is to get the imagination to seize the actual world - if only from time to time.” (Dillard, P.20) She elaborates on how her imagination sometimes played tricks on her, and things that were frightening really weren’t a...

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