Wally Lamb Essays

  • Free College Essays - Self-discovery in She's Come Undone by Wally Lamb

    509 Words  | 2 Pages

    She's Come Undone: Self-discovery Throughout She's Come Undone, Wally Lamb emphasizes the importance of self-discovery to one's life. Dolores has several epiphanies throughout the course of the novel, including her realization that all of her failed relationships are not solely her fault. She learns she is worth loving and is capable of surviving on her own. With each discovery about herself, Dolores learns to love herself a little more and blame herself a little less. Dolores' first realization

  • She's Come Undone: Female Voice

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    from a female's point of view. Because of his gender, it is impossible that Lamb could have experienced many of the hardships that Dolores must deal with in his novel. However, Lamb writes with a certain understanding of Dolores and her pain. In She's Come Undone, Lamb addresses issues often avoided by male authors, including female friendships and abortion. His convincing female voice has been critically acclaimed. Lamb writes about female friendships as if he has experienced them first-hand. His

  • She's Come Undone, by Wally Lamb

    936 Words  | 2 Pages

    drama or anything else. In the novel “She’s Come Undone” by Wally Lamb the personal relationship between the main character, Delores Price, and the people around her is challenging and complex. Like in any brilliant work of fiction you find yourself relating to the character in ways you never thought you ever could. Delores displays many emotional set backs and triumphs from beginning to end. Through articulate vocabulary, Wally Lamb manages to pull you into the world of Delores Price, and the

  • Gender-Bending in She's Come Undone

    2029 Words  | 5 Pages

    Gender-Bending in She's Come Undone Is Wally Lamb, author of  She's Come Undone, "qualified" to write a first-person narrator in a female voice? After all, as a man, what does he know about women's issues? In this essay I will discuss the issue of "gender-bending" writers and discuss Mr. Lamb's use of such tool. The term "gender-bender" usually refers to a pop singer or a follower of a pop cult "...who deliberately affects an androgynous appearance by wearing sexually ambiguous clothing

  • She's Come Undone by Wally Lamb

    1256 Words  | 3 Pages

    it was a particular event that motivated my change. These paralleling of worlds made the book extremely meaningful because I was able to relate to particular situations and the issues of behavior change in a personal context. References: Lamb, Wally She's Come Undone Washington Square Press 1992

  • She’s Come Undone by Wally Lamb

    681 Words  | 2 Pages

    films, the most important thing when watching other movies and reading books, is the meaning behind each scene and how they relate and affect our world. For this paper, I will discuss a book that I read a long time ago, which is She’s Come Undone by Wally Lamb and how this book relates to this course. She’s Come Undone is a story about a girl named Dolores Price. In this book, the author takes you through Dolores’ life, starting from age four until the age of forty. In this book, Dolores had a very rough

  • Mildred Pierce Summary, Character Analysis, and Opinion

    1427 Words  | 3 Pages

    salaries as a waitress and pie baker. However, Mildred’s luck is soon to change, as she takes up with an attorney and former partner of Bert, Wally. Mildred is able to use Wally’s business and real estate savvy to build a restaurant out of a deserted model home, and from there create a thriving chain of three food businesses. After becoming bored with Wally, however, Mildred craves a relationship with another man, a prestigious local man named Monty. Veda highly approves of her mother’s choice, as

  • Keillor's Prodigal Son

    1028 Words  | 3 Pages

    Keillor's "Prodigal Son" Keillor's "Prodigy Son" is a parody of the original, "The Parable of a Prodigy Son". When making the parody, Keillor had to change certain characteristics in order to make it humorous. Some of these characteristics were the setting, characters and the tone. In changing these, Keillor had to be respectful and keep the same theme in the parody as the original parable because he didn't want to offend the fans of the original parable. Keillor turns the famous parable, "The

  • Mildred Pierce - A Woman’s Place is in the Kitchen

    1102 Words  | 3 Pages

    poverty and into a high-class businesswoman. In the beginning of the story we are described how she has been earning extra money from baking and designing superb and stunning cakes. Next, she brings out her talent by cooking dinner for Wally, as she tried to impress Wally to marry her so she’ll be able to survive out of her tragic days. She really was a marvelous cook, and he watched deli... ... middle of paper ... ...using skills, tricks, shortcuts, and her proficient talent. Cooking takes Mildred

  • Mastering a Skill

    939 Words  | 2 Pages

    to this skill. The job opportunities are incredible. It has even been proven that bilingualism has cognitive advantages across the entire lifespan, from children to adults. According to the “Canadian Modern Language Review” an article by Lazarak,Wally called “Advantages linguistics, scolaires et cognitifs de l’immersion francaise”, their review after several studies shows that FI programs enable students to develop levels of proficiency in both French and English, at no cost to their academic success

  • Cider House Rules

    731 Words  | 2 Pages

    abortions and delivering babies. Wally Worthington, whose wealthy parents are in the apple and cider business gets to know Homer when Wally, takes his girlfriend Candy to the St. Cloud's orphanage for an abortion. These three become close friends and Homer accompanies them back to their hometown where he spends the next six months. It's a new life for Homer, and he realizes that his years at the orphanage are just the past and it is time for him to move on. Wally, who became a captain in the Air

  • Family Unity And Moral Values

    1220 Words  | 3 Pages

    believe about the family. It's concerned with quality of living and how you define quality of living. It basically gets down to what you think is the most important, in other words what you value. "Family values is nice when you've got Ward and June and Wally and Beaver. Unfortunately, the world has changed quite a bit from the 1950s to 1996. Things have just changed so rapidly and so quick…" (Anderson) The honesty, setting examples with your morals and actions, and bringing up the people to be responsible

  • Cider House Rules

    1034 Words  | 3 Pages

    the board wants to replace him. Mr. Rose has to over come non-diligent workers, and conflicts with his daughter and keep a calm, flowing working environment. Candy Kendall has to deal with her husband Wally Worthington being away fighting for the United States in World War II. On the other side Wally has to deal with the loss of ability to use his legs and being paralyzed in a wheel chair. But, none of these are more compelling or can be looked at in so many ways as Homer's. Now from the time Dr.

  • Compare The Young Ravens That Call Upon Him and When Twilight Falls Upon The Stump Lots

    553 Words  | 2 Pages

    great detail about the eagles fate. In the stump lots story man is present and the story ends with an irony of situation. There is foreshadowing in the young ravens story because it keeps on mentioning how unsafe the valley was for the ewe and lamb to be wondering around alone with out the rest of the flock. Also the story kept saying how hunger the eaglets were. The theme in the young ravens story is....... one animal destroys another while innocently fulfilling the laws of its own

  • Good and Evil in Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience

    1525 Words  | 4 Pages

    powerful, he lived a simple life. He worked as an engraver and a professional artist, but he was always very poor. His work received little attention and when it did, most people found it confusing. Blake shows you cannot have good without evil in “The Lamb” and “The Tyger,” and the Proverbs of Hell, through the use of animal symbolism. A Worm and a Plough is included in the Proverbs of Hell, to exhibit the relationship between good and evil. Blake speaks on this by saying, “The cut worm forgives the

  • Salvation

    1456 Words  | 3 Pages

    something happened to you inside” (219). He believed her. When he was brought to church, his aunt directed him to the front row, where he sat calmly and patiently in the heat, waiting for the preacher to begin the service. The Preacher welcomed the “young lambs” (219) and started his sermon. Towards the end of his speech he invited the young children to the altar to be saved. At this point, Langston was confused because he was not seeing Jesus before him. All the young boys and girls sprang to their feet

  • Lamb to the Slaughter By Roald Dahl

    1130 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lamb to the Slaughter By Roald Dahl In Roald Dahl’s short story “Lamb to the slaughter,” the behaviour of the characters makes us shiver. The story starts off with Mary Maloney‘s husband walking in from work and sitting down in the armchair. She then made him a drink and asked him he was tired. She then asked him if he wanted supper but he said no. later he said he had something important to say and for a few moments she stood shocked. She went to get the supper out any way but when she

  • The Tyger Poem Summary

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Renowned poet from the Romantic Age, William Blake, wrote what is arguably his most famous poem, “The Tyger.” Published in 1794, the poem is a series of tabled questions throughout its six four-line stanzas, and it aims to amaze readers through the magnificence of God’s creations. A read of mild to moderate difficulty, it exalts the universe’s inexplicable features as it progresses, and by doing this and maintaining its open structure, it opens a world of imagination and mystery that can leave readers

  • Salvation

    1045 Words  | 3 Pages

    and only then will these children be able to achieve pure "salvation." This is highly evident within the first paragraph where the author writes, "Then just before the revival ended, they held a special meeting for children, "to bring the young lambs to the fold"" (Hughes 1). It is during these ceremonies that Langston feels that he has almost committed a crime for which his sins will never be forgiven. Throughout the reading, the author explains the process that these young children are put

  • War Photographer Poem Essay

    1219 Words  | 3 Pages

    How is contrast between innocence and experience presented? The Piano, The Tyger, War Photographer, The Lamb, In Mrs Tilscher’s Class, The Early Purges The six poems that I will be discussing are all linked by themes of innocence and experience; however, these themes are expressed differently by each poet through their tone, language choices or structure. War Photographer by Carol Anne Duffy, presents the photographer’s experiences of a world being torn apart by war. Duffy uses a number of literary