Dear 4chan, HOW THE FUCK DO YOU WRITE A READING LOG? Nobody ever tought me how to do that. They can't just ask something of a student expect them to know how to do it/
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Anonymous2006-08-20 22:39
just drop out
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Anonymous2006-08-20 22:46
Wll then I'll be a failure
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Anonymous2006-08-21 0:02
your fucked johnny
stop going to parties
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Anonymous2006-08-21 0:05
This is 4chan, none of us go to parties.
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Anonymous2006-08-21 0:53
You just write what you think of the book you're reading. Easy as pie.
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Anonymous2006-08-21 1:03
Do I use paragraphs with intros, thesises and all that jazz, or do I just ramble on like a madman(or a 4 chan poster?)
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Anonymous2006-08-21 2:32
You're basically taking notes. Assuming this is summer reading, don't put too much effort into it; unless you get a psycho bitch teacher from hell they probably won't dwell on the whole thing too much.
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Anonymous2006-08-21 19:35
Summer Reading Log #2 for “Gone with the wind”
By: Anon
Margaret Mitchell
Like most writers Margaret “Peggy” Mitchell used parts of her own life as the biases of her story, despite numerous claims otherwise. She grew up in turn-of-the-century Atlanta, where she treated by her relatives to the highly exaggerated stories of the Civil War. Like the characters Aunt Pitty and Bonnie Margaret was known almost exclusively by her nickname Peggy. Her mother died at an early age. She was married twice, once to the bootlegger Red Upshaw, and secondly to John Marsh. She wrote the epic while nursing a broken ankle, but hid it from her peers, until one of her friends laughed at the notion of her writing a novel, to which Peggy answered by whipping out her ginormuos manuscript and giving it to the editor. She immediately regretted this but it was too late. Peggy was killed by a Taxi while crossing the street.
As I said before, Peggy’s life mirrors the lives of her creations. In her youth Peggy was infatuated with Clifford Henry, a soft spoken solder bearing a resemblance to Ashley Wilkes. He would later die on the first day of American involvement in World War I. Margaret was obviously inspired by herself when she created Scarlet. Peggy’s mother died while she was away at collage, a scene that was paralleled when Mrs. O’Hara died of pneumonia. One can easily see Rhett Butler in the bootlegger Red Upshaw. Both Red and John courted Peggy, but Red made the first move, but the marriage ended when his bootlegging was revealed. Peggy would latter claim that Red sexually assaulted her after the marriage ended, similar to what happened between Red and Scarlet. She married John Marsh 3 years latter.
Even in death Peggy evoked the spirit of the absent-minded Scarlet O’Hara. She was run down by a drunk Taxi driver near Peachtree Street. The driver was charged with 40 years, despite the fact that witnesses claimed that she wasn’t looking, and her friends backed that up by saying she did that often.
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Anonymous2006-08-21 23:30
Uhhh, page numbers?
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Anonymous2006-08-22 0:03
j00 need page numbers for reading logs 0.o?
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Anonymous2006-08-22 6:15
I never really liked the giver, I feel asleep reading it the first time. I tried to reread it and then eventually gave the book to a friend, because I was sick of it.
Instead I just sat down, and read an old book by John Steinbeck. The Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights, now there is a good book for you. That or PNIN/Lolita/Pale Fire.