In the
Michael Lewis’ The Blind Side, the
main character Michael Oher is one unique person. Between his athletic abilities, his huge
size, and his weird upbringing there is really no one like him in the entire
world. In this true story about Oher’s life he grew up in the ghetto of Memphis,
Tennessee battling many adversities. He lived in many places and slept many
nights in different random places. He thinks he has twelve siblings, but it
isn’t even sure of that when asked. Comparing him to any other human on this
planet is just not a fair question to ask regarding Michael. His unbelievable
strength, speed, and perseverance can only be compared to that of a super hero.
Standing at six foot five inches and weighing over three hundred pounds,
Michael is to say the least a genetic freak. He can run a forty-yard dash in
5.3 seconds. At the 2008 draft combine Michael’s broad jump was one hundred and
nine inches. If I had to compare Michael
to one character it would have to be Super Man. They are very similar in their
abnormal strength, but also on a deeper level. Super Man was born with out
parents until the Kent family found him and took him in. This also happened
with Michael. Oher’s mother could never really take care of him, which led to
him bouncing around Memphis from home to home. His story begins with his
childhood friend’s father Tony Henderson taking him to the rich private school
of Briarcrest. From there Michaels amazing story took off. The schools athletic
coach’s took a huge interest in Oher because of his amazing size. While at a
Briarcrest basketball practice Michael first met his eventual parental
guardian, Sean Tuohy. Tuohy had been a volunteer coach at the practice Michael
was at. Although the tremendous difference in size and race Tuohy saw a lot of
himself in Michael. The book explains how Tuohy growing up was also the poor
kid at a rich private school, and he knew how Michael felt. It started with
Tuohy giving Michael lunch money so he could eat at school and tranfromed into
Leigh Ann Tuohy buying him clothes and offering him a home. Oher and his new
family, the Tuhoy’s, could not have been more different. Much like how the Kent’s
took in a child who would grow up to be completely different than them. The
Tuhoy’s never knew that Michael would grow up to be an eventual first round
draft pick or NFL star, just like the Kent’s would have never guessed there new
son would grow up to be a savior of Earth. Oher’s story and Super Man’s are
oddly alike. Both of them grew up in
homes not of their own, but gained the same thing, a solid and loving family
life. Both Super Man and Michael Oher have their new family’s beliefs instilled
in them forever. They will both be forever grateful for being given a chance to
be part of a new family.
Eric's Reading Place for Reading
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Reflection 10: hero
The
most memorable leader to me in any novel has to be Harry Potter. For eight
straight novels Harry Potter battles good versus evil, and conquers all eight
times. He saves his school from getting taken over by the evil death-eaters,
who are led by the evil Lord Voldemort. We learn in the first book that
Voldemort had killed Harry’s Parents and tried to kill him when he was just an
infant. It is said that he is the only person who ever survived. Although Harry
Potter does not technically have all of the hero aspects, he is a strong smart
leader who is always helping people. Time and time again he saves the day,
whether that is winning the Goblet of Fire or eventually fighting Lord
Voldemort and conquering him. He is the greatest hero ever because for eight
books he was stuck right in the middle of the good versus evil battle and he
never quit or let down. Even when times were down, Harry stuck with it and in
return he ended up defeating Lord Voldemort. Harry Potter is the greatest hero
and leader of any other character in any book.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Reflection 9: Great Moments
Top 3 Moments: The Blind Side
-Lawrence
Taylor is described as the perfect example of a defensive end, literally making
quarterbacks afraid to play against him for fear of getting sacked. At the
time, the giants coach explains that he’s seen quarterback forget the snap count
and call time-outs when they thought they saw Taylor but he was really on the
sidelines. Taylor knew every quarterback looked for him before every play, and
would even call out where he was to let the rest of the team know. One player
in particular experienced his fury first hand, and that was Joe Theismann. The
powerful moment is when Lewis describes Taylor’s hit on Theismann as “sounding
like a gunshot” when Theismann’s entire leg snapped in the tackle. This is
powerful because it was important in history, but it also sets up the
importance of Michael Oher’s position. Oher, an offensive lineman, is
responsible for protecting the quarterback. It was the mistake of someone in
his same position that ended a great quarterback’s career too early.
-Another
great moment is when a high school coach, Hugh Freeze, sees Big Mike for the
very first time because of the amazing language. Lewis describes Mike so that
readers can visualize him completely. Some of the phrases he uses are “Good
God! He’s a monster!”, “The kid’s shoulders and ass were as wide as his
doorway”, “Whatever the dimensions, they couldn’t do justice to the effect they
created”, and ”When football coaches describe
their bigger players, they can sound like ranchers discussing a steer…
[using] words like girth, mass, and trunk size”. The descriptive language is so
powerful because it’s the reader’s first impression on Michael and its
definitely a lasting one.
-The third
great moment comes when Michael is shopping with Leigh Anne. It’s powerful first
because of the language. “She was five one, 115 pounds of blonde hair, straight
white teeth, and the most perfect pink dress. He was black, poor, and three
times her size.” This creates such a great picture because at that time, that
was just something you didn’t see. The comparison is so powerful because it
shows the true and pure character of Leigh Anne. In the same shopping scene,
Michael takes Leigh Anne to “ghetto” part of town where there a shops with
clothes his size. When she expresses fear of being there, Michael says to her, “Don’t
worry. I got your back.” This is an amazing moment because she’s supposed to be
looking after him, but he feels a strong need to protect her. This moment
explains their relationship and why it works. They depend on each other in
different ways and both have had a great impact on the other’s life.
Reflection 8: Top Five
Eric’s All-Time Top Five:
· > Jay Gatsby is in search for his love, Daisy. He
is constantly trying to get her attention with extravagant parties, but her
cheating husband is in the way. A small-town man, Nick Carraway, gets in the
middle of things when Jay asks for his help.
· > I like this book because it’s an easy and very
entertaining novel and very well written. It has a lot of symbolism and
addresses different moral issues. >RIYL: short, fast paced reads, books set in the
twenties, historical fiction, drama, unhappy endings
2. Holes
Louis Sachar
Louis Sachar

· >Holes
is a funny story that keeps readers guessing. I liked a lot of Louis Sachar’s
books because he always tells interesting, far-fetched stories that he
convinces you could actually happen. I loved all the well-rounded characters
and the way he gave them names like Armpit, Zero, Squid, and X-Ray.
· >RIYL: funny, young adults novels, Wayside School, books with mainly male
chracters, subplots
· >Billy Beane transforms the game of baseball by
basing the scouting of players on statistics and math rather than looks and
tradition. With this method of recruitment, against all odds, he leads the team
with the lowest budget in the MLB, the Oakland A’s, to a twenty game winning
streak, setting a new AL record.
· >I liked that it was a true story about sports.
It’s very interesting to learn about baseball from the perspective of a general
manager compared to just reading the news and watching on tv.
· > RIYL: sports novels, Heat, true inspirational stories, non-fiction
4. Brave New World
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley

· >It was interesting, but scary, to read about
what our world might come to. I liked it because Huxley wrote this in 1935
predicting what the world would be like so far into the future, and what right
about a lot of things. I loved reading about this crazy world that predicts the
downfall of where we could be headed.
· >RIYL: utopian novels, futuristic worlds, The Hunger Games, books that make you
think
· > Harry Potter learns that he is a wizard and is
sent to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Him and his new friends, Ron and Hermione,
embark on a series of adventures to stop the dark lord, Voldemort, who wants to
kill Harry and destroy the all-powerful stone before it gets into the wrong
hands.
· >Harry
Potter takes readers to a whole new world and it’s so easy to get lost in
it. When I read this when I was younger, I thought about how cool Harry’s life
would be. Rowling is a fantastic writer and there’s a twist in the story at
every corner.
· >RIYL: fantasy, magic, unrealistic fiction, long
reads, action and adventure
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Book 2 Project: Comparing to the Movie
The
novel Moneyball is a true story in
which a MLB general manager, Billy Beane, changes the entire process of
selecting players to play on his team. Moneyball
is a very strange book in the way that it mostly had to deal with statistics
and the business aspect of the game of baseball rather than the game itself. In
comparison to many other action packed sports books this one was very
different. I was curious to see how the book would compare to the movie, which
came out in 2011.
When
Moneyball opened in theaters,
September of 2011, it climbed its way straight to the top of the box office. It
grossed over 75 million dollars while it was in theaters. When I finally saw
the movie, I really enjoyed it, but just recently after reading the book I don’t
understand why it would be made into a movie. Of course there is the great
story of how one of the lowest budgeted teams goes on to win twenty straight
games setting an American League record, but the book mainly focuses on the
business side of the MLB. To make the movie more interesting they clearly
needed to add more than what just the book had to offer. In the movie there are
several scenes in which Billy Beane and his daughter have meaningful long conversations,
giving her a major acting role. In the book they do talk about Billy’s
daughter, but never to an extent in which she would play a major role in the
movie. On page 246 Billy calls his daughter to ask her simply, “Are you
watching the game?” That is pretty much the most they mention Casey Beane in Moneyball, Lewis doesn’t even give her
any dialogue in the book. My favorite part of the book was not even included in
the movie, which made me upset. I really enjoyed the first fortyish pages
because Lewis went into detail about Billy Beane’s childhood and how he had
been selected in the first round of the 1988 draft. Reading about Billy’s past
changed the way I view the book completely. The book basically described him as
a legend of California high school baseball. I think the movie could have been
a lot better if it included at least some of the scenes Lewis describes in the
book. The movie did do a good job of showing the setting. I pictured exactly
what the scouting room looked like in the movie while reading. The movie really
didn’t give the book any justice however on the statistical and business aspect
parts. I understand the movie would have been really boring if it was just
about stats and business in the MLB, but the amount of time spent explaining
the process, the number of players scouted, and how interpret the right stats
for a player was a majority of the book. The Movie needed to at least explain
that a little better.
Overall
however, I feel that the movie was a fairly good interpretation of the book. Moneyball had to definitely be one of
the hardest books to make into a movie. Although the movie was missing some of
my favorite scenes, added character plot lines, and missed out on really
showing the business aspect of baseball I really did enjoy the movie. They are
pretty different, but I enjoy both the book and the movie.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Reflection 7
In my mind, if a book is listed as a memoir or is
non-fiction, it must be 100 percent true. I’m trusting that the publishers will
either fact check the proposed novels, or at least do a little background check
on the authors. It is up to the publishers to look into memoirs and nonfiction
novels, if they didn’t then any book could really be not the whole 100 percent
truth. A half-truth novel could still be a good story with good morals, but the
authors shouldn’t try and make people believe they are the complete truth. Frey
and Mortenson should have just told the complete truth, or made their novels
fiction not a memoir. We do need genres, and we do need to label from what is
fiction and non-fiction because it can mean one story is a complete fake and
one story is the complete truth. Non-fiction should just be complete truth, and
as readers we are relying on the authors and publishers for complete truth.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Reflection 6
When I read I like to read about true events, so my favorite
genre is nonfiction. I really enjoy reading about sports stories and history. I
guess I really like to learn about past history of sporting events. I like to imagine what it would be like to be
there in that special moment whether that is winning a championship or breaking
a record. When I was little I really enjoyed reading magical fiction because I was
really into that then. Now I hate that genre and I just think it is really
weird and dumb. I think I would rather read a dictionary then read Twilight. I think labels are effective
in the way that they can help you find a book very quickly, but when people
label books I think they could label them wrong and make some books almost
misleading. So in general I guess I have never really looked at the genre system, if I see a good sports book I would like to read I usually get it.
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