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Review of the book “Puppet on a chain" by Alistair MacLean”

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Review of the book “Puppet on a chain" by Alistair MacLean”             Alistair MacLean was a Scottish novelist specially known for his suspense thriller novels. Many of his books were made into popular films. His book puppet on a chain is also a suspense thriller novel. This book is also translated in several other languages including Gujarati.      Story in this book taken place at Amsterdam. Protagonist of the story is Interpol agent poul Sharman and his two lady assistants Maggie and Belinda  came here to exposé the word wide scandal of drugs and all. Here it turns into blood shade story so many murders and suspense. We can see here in the book that this whole group and people in this are connected with it in so discipline way that it seems impossible to expose.     We also can see that in all over the world corruption is equally found not only in India but also in France and other countries.  From Police department to the religion bad people are found. Some

harry potter webquest

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Self-Help culture and Harry Potter : Harry potter is a self help book. A   self-help book  is one that is written with the intention to instruct its readers on solving personal problems. The books take their name from   Self-Help , an 1859 best-seller by   Samuel Smiles , but are also known and classified under " self-improvement ", a term that is a modernized version of self-help. Self-help books moved from a niche position to being a   postmodern cultural phenomenon in the late twentieth century    The theme of Choice and Chance : the Harry Potter series is esteemed and loved for many reasons: the rich fantasy world, the beloved characters, the humor, the suspense-driven plots, the meaningful choices... and the way the plot fits together like a tightly constructed jigsaw puzzle. The endings of the Harry Potter novels are filled with "oh, yeah!" moments in which everything suddenly fits together in new and unexpected ways: the revelation of Tom Riddle as

Review of the movie ‘Badrinath ki dulhaniya’

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Review of the movie ‘Badrinath ki dulhaniya’   Director : Shashank Khaitan , Producer   Karan Johar (Dharma production) Starring : Varun Dhawan ‘Aaliya Bhatt Music:   “ Badrinath ki dulhaniya” title itself suggest that movie is about marriage. This movie is second instalment of “ Hampty Sharma ki dulhaniya”. This is a romantic comedy movie. With very light mood it talks about issue id dowry in India. And the concept of marriage. The movie background is of India, two small town of India ‘jansi’ and ‘Kota’            This   movie is like breaking stereotypes on the name of Vaidehi. We all know name vaidehi itself has more responsibility. But the movie the breaking it and I personally like it. The character of Vaidehi is totally represent the modern Indian girl. Who has ambition and a dream to touch the sky and for that she don’t want to do any sacrifices on the name of family, society and so called “Ijjat” of father. And she proves it. She is capable for do

Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening by Robert Frost

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    The narrator (may be the poet himself) of the poem Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening stops by some woods on his way one evening. The narrator knows the owner of the woods and even where he lives. He is a bit relaxed thinking that the owner of the woods lives in the village and so he won’t see the narrator stopping here. Therefore he can continue watching the natural beauty of his snow-covered woods. In the second stanza, the narrator of the poem says that his dear horse, whom he is using as his carriage, must think it strange to stop here between the woods and the frozen lake in a dark evening, as he normally stops near a farmhouse. The narrator calls his horse “ my little horse ”, as it is very dear to him or may be the horse is a little one in the literal sense, i.e., a pony. It may also suggest that the speaker is a humble and ordinary citizen and cannot afford to buy an expensive horse. He also personifies the horse by indicating that it has a thought process and a

Digging by Seamus Heaney

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        Digging” is a relatively short poem (thirty-one lines) in free verse. While it has no set pattern of doing so, it breaks up into stanzas of two to five lines. The presence in the poem of the first person “I” who wields a pen, and the family reminiscences, identify the speaker as Seamus Heaney himself and the poem as autobiographical. The poem is filled with the terminology of Heaney’s native Ireland. Heaney begins the poem with an image of himself, pen in hand. He hears or is remembering the sound of digging under his window. It is his “father, digging”; however, the reader is told in line 7 that it is an echo from the past. Knowing that, “to ‘look down’ ” can be understood to refer both to the memory of his father’s presence below the window and to looking back through time to it. The image of his father as he “Bends low” can also mean two things: the bending that accompanies digging and the stooping of age. Because his father is dead, “twenty years away,” the sound

The Road not taken by Robert Frost

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      The speaker stands in the woods, considering a fork in the road. Both ways are equally worn and equally overlaid with un-trodden leaves. The speaker chooses one, telling himself that he will take the other another day. Yet he knows it is unlikely that he will have the opportunity to do so. And he admits that someday in the future he will recreate the scene with a slight twist: He will claim that he took the less-traveled road. The Road Not Taken” consists of four stanzas of five lines. The rhyme scheme is ABAAB; the rhymes are strict and masculine, with the notable exception of the last line (we do not usually stress the   -ence  of   difference ). There are four stressed syllables per line, varying on an iambic tetrameter base. This has got to be among the best-known, most-often-misunderstood poems on the planet. Several generations of careless readers have turned it into a piece of Hallmark happy-graduation-son, seize-the-future puffery. Cursed with a perfect marriag

The Women of Brewster Place by Gloria Naylor

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SYMBOLS   BREWSTER PLACE’S WALL The wall separating Brewster Place from the main avenues of the city serves several important purposes. Following its initial creation, the wall comes to symbolize the indifference with which Brewster Place is treated by the men responsible for its creation. Because of the wall, Brewster Place is economically and culturally isolated from the rest of the city. The wall has forced Brewster Place to fend for itself. For the residents of Brewster Place, the wall symbolizes the fact that for most of them, Brewster Place will be the end of the road. Their lives will go no further, regardless of how much they may hope or dream. The wall, for them, represents the wall that has been built around their lives, either by failed opportunities or by a series of misfortunes. The true disastrousness of the wall becomes evident at the end of the novel. Along this wall, Lorraine drags her nearly lifeless body after she is gang raped, and it is from this wall that