Letter Home Essays

  • World War I: Letter Home

    1838 Words  | 4 Pages

    the army act decisively if many of the men who should be soldiers decide to stay at home because they are scared? Those who claim that their religion stops them from fighting are in the wrong as well; I am a religious man, and God has said to me (and I believe him) that He agrees with our fighting the war; God is on our side! Lots of Love ------- END FIRST LETTER Dear Mum, I am writing this letter to you from one of the support trenches, about half a mile back from the front line

  • Relationships Between Vietnam Soldiers and Their Families

    1834 Words  | 4 Pages

    The relationship between the soldiers of the Vietnam War was different from the relationships with people from home. The soldiers felt as if they could not tell the whole truth about the war through their eyes to their loved ones at home. The soldiers that they were with all the time understood the pain and confusion each other felt, yet no one talked about it. War changed how people had relationships with others. War could bring people closer or tear them apart. The relationships between the

  • Free Essays - Importance of Listening in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

    1202 Words  | 3 Pages

    Walton's letters home. Walton listens to Victor's story from Victor, and Frankenstein listens to the monster's story.  Each person has a message or warning that they need to relay to the other. They stress the importance that the other person listens as best as possible in order to understand the message they are trying to get across. Frankenstein emphasizes the importance of listening through a series of key characters. Mrs. Saville and the rest of society read Walton's letters which tell

  • Novel/Movie Difference Mary Shelleys Frankenstein

    515 Words  | 2 Pages

    novel, the screenplay eliminates most of these minute differences. For example, the letters in the beginning of the novel were depicted as high action scenes rather than in letter format. The introduction of the movie was my first difference listed. In the book, the captain of Frankenstein’s ship, R. Walton, wrote letters home to his sister about his voyage to the north pole. In the movie, it depicted these letters as action sequences happening in real time. A couple of in-depth differences in the

  • Lady Macbeth

    717 Words  | 2 Pages

    collapse, fully justified. Lady Macbeth’s role as a supporting wife at the start of the play exceeds the duties of a ‘normal’ wife. She is the ‘Eve’ to Macbeth’s ‘Adam’ and is tempted. Although Macbeth hints at the idea of taking the crown in his letter home, it is Lady Macbeth’s ruthless determination to make him king that persuaded him to murder Duncan. Did she do this in the interests of Macbeth or was it to fulfil her own ambition? I would argue that it was to fulfil her own ambition because she

  • The Attack on Pearl Harbor Shapes American History

    2445 Words  | 5 Pages

    Unfortunately, people in Hawaii were not warned; they were living their normal lives, doing things they were accustomed to doing such as going to parties, writing letters home, and just doing things that a man stationed in Hawaii would do. Many men wrote letters home to their girlfriend or parents or kept a journal. The following letter is an example. Doctor Paul E. Spangler wrote it: "With my Pearl Harbor plates on I had the right of way and I was out there in nothing flat. ...I hurried up to

  • e.e. cummings: The Life of America's Experimental Poet

    1939 Words  | 4 Pages

    Science at Harvard University. In 1900, Edward left Harvard to become the ordained minister of the South Congregational Church, in Boston. As a child, E.E. attended Cambridge public schools and lived during the summer with his family in their summer home in Silver Lake, New Hampshire. (Kennedy 8-9) E.E. loved his childhood in Cambridge so much that he was inspired to write disputably his most famous poem, "In Just-" (Lane pp. 26-27) Not so much in, "In Just-" but Cummings took his father's pastoral

  • Roald Dahl The Man

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    island, swimming, fishing and going by boat. When Roald was four years old, his father died, so his mother had to organise the trip alone for herself and her six children. At school, he was always homesick. At St. Peter's Prep School, all the letters home were controlled by the headmaster, and afterwards at Repton Public School, he had to wear a horrible school uniform [with braces, waist coat, hat and lots of buttons, all black]. The younger boys were often punished by the headmaster and the older

  • Hip Hop Culture

    2110 Words  | 5 Pages

    album jacket, Serch sums up hip-hop in ‘89: “There was a time when nothing was more important than the New York Rap Scene.” It’s dilluted, but not divided.” To hip-hop afficionados, Serch’s quote sounds like the equivalent to a Vietnam soldier’s letter home. Obviously, the group saw the possibility of the hip-hop culture being tainted. Another good example of a group combatting the increase in commercial hip-hop was The Boot Camp Clik, consisting of Buckshot, Helter Skelter, Cocoa Brovaz, OGC, Illa

  • Creative Writing A Letter Home

    844 Words  | 2 Pages

    Task 5- I received a concise letter in the hand of a man wishing to sell his property, the estate of Bly, requesting a prompt sale, composed of a few words and requesting total confidentiality; which failed to express why this sale should be expedited, but I knew well not to ask. My curiosity was temporarily allayed when approaching this fine residence, as rays of warmth bathed my skin in a warm glow. The Gothic structure loomed ahead, its gloomy countenance dispelled my initial feelings of relaxation

  • Comparing A Letter Home And Waiting For Dan

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    The two writings, “A Letter Home” and “Waiting for Dan,” both reveal similarities and differences in how they view their American historical events. In “A Letter Home,” Kara, a student from Kent State University in Ohio writes a letter to her parents about a protest that took place at her campus during the Vietnam War. In “Waiting for Dan,” a wife is waiting for her husband to come home after an incident that occurred on the Freedom Ride during the American Civil Rights Movement. Through these two

  • Dear America Letters Home Analysis

    958 Words  | 2 Pages

    circumstances have caused soldiers mental stress. Research shows the brutality that the soldiers of the Vietnam War went through, the novel Fallen Angels and the video series “Dear America: Letters Home” are very similar in this depiction, but also have slight differences. Fallen Angels and "Dear America: Letters Home" both focus on the Vietnam War and giving us a look into the life of a soldier. Fallen Angels is a novel that gives readers insight into the mind of a soldier.

  • Abigail Adams Letters Home Analysis

    1298 Words  | 3 Pages

    Letters Written By Abigail Adams It’s highly important to acknowledge the fact that these special documents are letters. Written with the expectation of only being read between the privacy of a mother and son and husband and wife. They were written during the spark of Republican Motherhood, which is a term that refers to the late 18th century gender roles women took during the Revolutionary Period. Women had to become the educators. Abigail Adams, being a strong model of this “Republican Motherhood”

  • Comparing A Letter Home And Waiting For Dan

    670 Words  | 2 Pages

    thousands of troops being sent to Vietnam. Another mutiny caused by the segregation of white and colored people. So many protests against certain decisions, but the authorities do not seem to care in both the short stories “A Letter Home” and “Waiting for Dan”. In “A Letter Home,” students protest against the United States troops invading Cambodia, and decide to make very rash decisions such as burning down buildings to prove their acrimony. In “Waiting for Dan,” a group of white and colored people

  • Letter Home From a Soldier in Vietnam

    824 Words  | 2 Pages

    Letter Home From a Soldier in Vietnam Dear Mom, I am doing great. Well…When I say great, I mean I'm as good as you can be over here. This place is like a giant valley of death, that's keeps getting filled with more dead American soldiers every day. We keep asking ourselves the question, why are we here? Why are we dying for a cause that's got nothing to do with us? We just don't see the point in us being here any more. It's been 7 months since I saw you all now. I hope you are all

  • Fahrenheit 451 Letter Home Analysis

    1155 Words  | 3 Pages

    war must be taking its toll on our home as well. Have you been making ammunition in the factories yet, Mildred? In accordance with the news arriving from the village, almost all women have begun working in factories and are now producing war-related goods to support us soldiers. Many of us had experienced consternation when hearing the news of women and children participating in laborious tasks such as factory and farm work. It is of my greatest hope that this letter may reach you as I may not be able

  • Creative Writing A War Letter Home

    668 Words  | 2 Pages

    I’m starting to miss you both and my family. I’m wishing i haven’t gone to war because my friends, who came with me to war, they all died by running on No Man's Land. My friends are gone forever at No Man’s Land. The war, I’m in, will never stop and will keep going until it’ll end. I wish everything at war has ended quickly and never came back. I will never join war ever again. I miss you all forever. Everyday at night, the earth shakes when the bombs hit near us. We wake up to the Earth booming

  • Compare And Contrast A Letter Home And Waiting For Dan

    1362 Words  | 3 Pages

    shot pierce through the air. This happens in the passage of A Letter Home, when protestors against the Vietnam War use acts of violence to express their disagreement, and how it turns in the wrong direction when the fight gets too far. The main character is passionate about the event, and witnesses the uproar of violence, as expressed in the letter she writes to her parents have the shooting. The story Waiting for Dan and A Letter Home are both circling around the acts of protest for what certain

  • World War 2 Letters Home Essay

    1774 Words  | 4 Pages

    Letters Home From World War II Letters were a lifeline for the soldiers in World War II. They were okay with going through the complications of sending letters back home. They usually wrote to their girlfriends or their family. Not much mattered to the soldiers except making it out alive, and knowing there were people back home supporting them. They knew this due to the fact they received letters from home. The letters talked about how much they loved, and missed their loved ones in combat. And in

  • Clara Barton's Letters And Nostalgia And The Yearning For Home

    1168 Words  | 3 Pages

    Americans are Americans despite the space between generations. In reading the letters, I found that the men and women who wrote them were just as human as the Americans of today; the letters were written by average fathers, brothers, sisters, mothers, and even youngsters who wanted what nearly every member of the army wants: to get back home. The letters provide a deeply, personal experience that simply cannot be simulated through historical accounts of a War. As they were written specifically intended