2. Title significance

The title “A Separate Peace” is chosen by the author because being in an all boy’s military school has to extremely grueling both physically and mentally, and in that environment, one must find a separate peace to remain sane.

However, this doesn’t seem to help much at first for the narrator, Gene, who’s separate peace resides with Finny, his best friend who is also his greatest enemy. This “frenemy” is his peace because he can always find the Finny Logic in all things, saying that they aren’t real if they don’t suit his fancy. This appeals to Gene in an uncanny way that makes him torn between thinking of finny as his enemy or his savior, but nonetheless, this man is still his repose from the war. This is strange becuase he indirectly-on-purpose-except-not-really kills him; him the charismatic independent thinker. But at this point in the book, we find that gene has truly found peace with the world and with Finny- as if “Finny had absorbed it and taken it with him, and [Gene] was rid of it forever.”

Gene found a peace that no one else had found; “All others at some point found something in themselves pitted violently against something in the world around them” and Gene is the only one who was rid, woth his death, of his violence (against Finny). His personal war is over for he, the only force on earth capable of inflicting damage on Finny, finally broke him.

(There is also another peace that other characters sought comfort in. For example, Leper seeks peace in the nature surrounding the school and eventually outside of Devon in the war, but his eager eye betrayed him, and he succumbed to the madness of war, and the very thing he sought refuge in tricked him into handing over his sanity, and the case is similar with most others at Devon as well.)

 

1. summary

In the novel “A Separate Peace” by John Knowles, the aged Gene reflects back on his life at the military school Devon and the fateful accident of Finny falling out of the tree that was supposed to be a symbol of Gene’s and Finny’s undying friendship in the Super Suicide Society, but also a place of forced fear for Gene. The fall breaks Finny’s leg and permanently puts him out of the war for good and encourages his fancy of there never even being a war, merely (we discover later) because he knew he could never be involved in it. But the fall was not an accident; Gene had been upset that he’d failed and important trig test, and felt Finny was directly responsible for it for “forcing” Gene to go to the beach with him instead of studying, and so jounced the limb and caused Finny to fall. When Finny leaves to have some bed-rest at home, “winter” sets into Devon, both figuratively and literally, for all the joy has left with the jokester Finny, and during this time Gene focuses fully on his academics, convinced that 1) he must be as equally good in this as Finny is in sports and 2) finny was trying to hinder him from this all along.

But then Finny comes back, Gene loves him again, and the winter is not so cold anymore. So, with out any hesitation, Finny drags Gene back into old shenanigans and convinces Gene of the “falseness” of the war, and also of the ’44 Olympics that Gene must be prepared for. The weeks pass and Gene slips further and further under Finny’s control, going easily along with Winter carnivals and snow ball fights. Then the time comes when the first boy leaves Devon for the war and it turns out to be the unexpected Leper. Things mostly spiral down hill from here as the boys lose motivation and when Gene visits Leper next, he’e found that his old friend has lost his mind in the idea of war. Time wears on still and Finny’s leg is healing properly, until Brinker, as justice driven as can be, throws Gene and Finny into an interrogation that upsets Finny so much that he storms out, and clumsily falls and breaks his leg again. “A simple fracture” the school physician confirms, but Finny unexpectedly keels over and dies… apparently the doctor didn’t deserve his degree and let some bone marrow flow to his heart, thus killing him, while he was resetting the bone.

What a fantastically spectacular way to die. Cheers to you Finny.

But Gene finds his peace in Finny’s death and finds that all of his anger is gone with it, and while the war moves into Devon, Gene continues his life with out remorse for this actions in causing Finny’s death, because to gene, he was a great friend that was also his personal enemy.

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A mi amigo  Aimee le gusta los perritos siempre.  Tambien, a ella le gusta pasar tiempo con sus amigos los fines de semana. A ella le gusta comer los pasteles a veces. Tambien, a ella le gusta comer el queso a menudo. A ella le gusta leer buenos cuantos los fines de semana.

A Aimee le disgusta la tarea de la clase de íngles los viernes. Tambien, a ella le disgusta los gatos siempre. A ella le disgusta la clase de matemáticas frecuentemente.

Mis Gustos

For this project, we wrote several sentences in spanish about our likes dislikes, our family’s likes and dislikes, and our friend’s likes and dislikes. Then we found one picture to represent each sentence (example: if our sentence said something like “my sister likes to shop” we chose a picture of someone shopping.) then we used the ShowMe app to create a sort of slide show with the pictures and sentences. We would drag a picture into the blank page that the ShowMe app gives you and them write the sentence that goes along with it. Then we would
record ourselves reading the sentence. I liked this project because it was fun picking the pictures, but it also helped us know if we were writing and saying things correctly and that we knew the grammar and vocabulary.

Just Listen!

    The sense I would least like to lose would be hearing. I would miss the sounds of the pond: the water lapping against the boat,the excitement when I catch a fish, and the instruction of how to hook my bait. I would miss the sound of my mom’s voice and my puppy’s playful growl and bark that always makesme smile. I try to imagine that being deaf would be like being underwater, but I can still hear. I would miss the sound of the crickets singing me awake in the morning from the woods across from my house. And on walks I listen for cars. If I couldn’t hear I would probably end up with a few broken bones! It would also be difficult to talk to any one because if I was doing something that required my eyes, they would have to get my attention and I would have to stop to read their lips. Also, I memorize things orally meaning I repeat what the person says. I guess I could read their lips, but it would add to the difficulty. I would also miss the sound of the wind in the grass and my feet disturbing the peace of the swaying blades. Lastly, I couldn’t sing on tune any more because I wouldn’t be able to hear the sounds I’d be making. I would cry a river of tears if I lost any sense, but I would cry an ocean if I lost my hearing.