So I'm just now getting around to writing my last blog, and school has already started! School isn't too bad this year, but I think I definitely still liked summer better! I didn't do much this summer, besides swim, so i decided to write my blog about the swim camp I went to at Indiana University. It was really challenging , but I still had a lot of fun!
At camp we had to stay in a dorm room with a roommate. Lucky for me, another girl from my swim team went with me. Our day started at 5:30, when we got up and ate breakfast. We left the dorm room at 5:45, and walked a quarter of a mile or so to the pool. Morning practice was really hard, and only swimmers considered elite could sign up. We had to do the same practice as the college swimmers that swam at the pool! They even had these really cool pulleys that you attached weights to then tied to your waist to pull the weight up while you swim across the pool. Some of the college swimmers could pull up to ninety or a hundred pounds, but the most I ever pulled was35 or 40. After that we went to a meeting room inside the natatorium and the coaches presented a powerpoint on some drills and techniques we could work on to get faster, then we did another practice. After that our day was half over, and we walked to the cafeteria for lunch.
After lunch we walked back to our dorms for 45 minutes of downtime. We were all so tired by tired by that time that we could barely walk up the stairs! After that we had one more practice, and we are finally done for the day. We were only there for a week and when we got back, we were exhausted! On the bright side, I learned a lot and made a lot of new friends. I met some people who came from up north in places like Chicago, and they thought I had a Southern accent! I thought that was really funny because I didn't think I had one at all, if anything they had Northern accent! I even met a girl there who spoke fluent polish ,german , and English! I was really impressed! I'm really glad I had the opportunity to go and I think it was a great experience to get to swim in Indiana's pool, because its super nice! I also really liked that I got to meet so many new people! So overall, I think I had a pretty cool summer!
~Savannah K:)
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
The Fault in Our Stars
The third and last book I read this summer
is The Fault in Our Stars by John Green.
This book is about a girl named Hazel who has an extremely dangerous
form of cancer. But not only does Hazel have to deal with her own hardships
having cancer, her boyfriend also suffers from cancer, and her best friend has
eye cancer, causing him to have to have his eyes removed. This book takes the reader through the life of
hazel and through all the issues and problems she faces in her every day life.
The Fault in Our Stars made me
realize how lucky I really am to have good health and for my family members to
have good health. Because of Hazel’s
conditions she is forced to grow up faster than most other kids. Due to her
life-threatening condition she dropped out of high school and got her GED so
she could start college in case she passed away before graduating. Hazel had to
be very brave in order to live with her cancer and still accomplish her goals.
But, Hazel didn’t just have herself to focus on, towards the end of the book
her boyfriend died of cancer, and she had to cope with the loss of the person
she spent the most time with. Also, Hazel has to help one of her only other
friends deal with losing all of his sight when he has to have his eyes removed.
As you can see, Hazel has a lot to cope with.
I can’t even imagine what I would do if I were her!
This book also made me consider how I
would react if one of my family members or close friends had cancer like Hazel.
Obviously, I would be really scared for the person’s well being. I would
probably want to be around them a lot, just to make sure that their always
okay. In the book, Hazel’s parents always try to spend as much time with her as
possible. In the book, Hazel doesn’t really even think of her cancer as a bad
thing usually, she just thinks of it as a way of life. I think the reason she
thinks this way is because the people around her have supported her and taught
her how to cope with her condition. I think that if I ever had a family member
with a serious illness, I would try to help them take their mind away from
their sickness so they don’t have to think about it too much.
As you can tell, this book was really sad,
but it was also very interesting. This book took me no time at all to finish; I
couldn’t put it down! The Fault in Our Stars was a great book to finish
off the summer with!
~Savannah Kingery
Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet
The second book I’ve
read this summer is Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie
Ford. This book takes place in the years of World War II, in the city of
Seattle. Henry, the main character, was a Chinese boy, but went to an all-white
school. Henry absolutely hated it; he had to earn his tuition by working in the
cafeteria and all the kids made fun of him because he wasn’t like them. He had absolutely no friends, until Keiko
came along. Keiko also had to work in the cafeteria during lunch, so she became
instant friends with Henry. The only problem is that Keiko was Japanese. Soon
after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, Keiko’s family along with many
other Japanese families on the Pacific Coast were taken to internment camps to
make sure they weren’t spies for Japan or of any danger to America. This book
is all about Henry’s life during the war and trying to stay in touch with the
girl he loved when she had been taken away from him.
While reading
this book I considered how I would feel if I were a person of Japanese origin,
and was taken from my home to an internment camp. Overall, I think I would feel
very betrayed, because many of the Japanese sent to these camps were American
citizens! Also, lots of people immigrate to America for the sense of freedom,
but we gave people no choice in this! We ordered all Japanese people considered
a threat to leave their house, friends, and most of their belongings behind to
move to internment camps where many people even got split up from their family!
To me, it seems completely unfair to make anyone do this, especially
considering most of the Japanese sent to the camps were either citizens or
children. Then, when people returned to
their homes after the war, many found their Japanese cities and neighborhoods
to be totally changed! This book made me feel very sympathetic for
Japanese-Americans living during World War II
Another thing
I thought about while reading this book is how I would feel about the Japanese
during this time period if I were a Caucasian American. Many people resented
all Japanese people, and some wouldn’t even allow Japanese people to eat in
their restaurants or shop in their stores. I always have sympathy for people
who are considered outcasts like the Japanese were, so I think I would be
accepting of them. In the book, Henry writes to Keiko while she’s away but
never gets a response, because his dad disapproves of his friendship with a
Japanese person and makes sure the post office never delivers Keiko’s letters
to him. To me it sounds crazy that Henry’s dad would keep him from getting
letters from his best friend just because she’s Japanese! I think that everyone
should be treated equal, and that the Japanese should not have had to be
punished for the actions of a country they no longer lived in.
While this book
had a bit of a slow beginning, I ended up really enjoying it! The author does a
great job of showing how what happens to Henry as a boy effects him when he
grows older, through an epilogue sort of ending. The next book I will be reading will be my
choice book, and I think I’m going to choose The Fault in Our Stars by
John Green. I can’t wait to read it!
~Savannah Kingery
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