Friday, November 22, 2013

Summer Reading Project

Book: Kill Me Softly
By: Sarah Cross

The theme of this book is that love can conquer any obstacle. In Kill Me Softly, the main character, Mira meets a boy named Blue. At the beginning of the book, she dislikes Blue and always tells herself how she never wants to see him, but somehow, she can never stay away from him. In the middle of the book, she starts falling in love with him and he falls in love with her, but in the most intimate moments, he always seems to turn away. He becomes rude and nasty toward Mira and she can't figure out why. Toward the end of the book, she discovers that if they fall in love, Blue would have to reveal his darkest secret, and if that happens, he has to kill her. Mira and Blue know that their love will not work, but with help, anything is possible. In the last chapter, it says, "He was so much more than his curse, and she was so much more than the girl who could betray him. Together...they could be anything." This proves how love can conquer any obstacle.

Complex characters develop over the course of a text by the way they talk, react, and think. These factors show the reader how the person acts, and behaves. The more that the characters are descried or put into context,the more the reader can relate to that person. This makes it more intimate and relatable. Complex characters interact with other characters by talking and acting. In a book when characters correspond with the reader and other characters, we find out more about them. Finally, complex characters advance the plot because the more we as readers get to know the characters, the more we can relate and the more intense the plot gets.

The following article is a review of the book in another persons point of view. I think this is a good source to read because other people views on books and sources are sometimes even more reliable then the summary itself.

1 comment:

  1. This looks like a really good book. After I finish my current book, I will definitly have to read this. I liked how you wrote about this in extreme detail; it really interested me more in this book.

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