English, asked by natasha561, 10 months ago

Hello everyone plz can you help mee......

Write a Book review of a novel that you have read with
suitable title, name of the author, main characters, story outline as well as the positive
and the negative aspects.

Plz help me i will chose the brainlist.....

The level should be of class 10th.

Plz help meeee guyssss....... ​

Answers

Answered by Jourdynoates
1

Notes/Thoughts

John Green’s, Looking For Alaska

This book in particular has caught me, and filled my mind with speculations and answers to questions in which I never thought I could understand let alone have some type of  answer to. This book has invoked questions that no one truly has the answer to, and if they do the answer is neither right or wrong precisely because there is no legitimate validation or verification.

“How will I ever get out of this labyrinth” - Simon Bolivar. What labyrinth, living or dying, and in which is he trying to escape “the world or the end of it”, or is it truly about escaping, we spend all our lives stuck in the labyrinth thinking how will we elude it, and contemplating, deliberating, and envisaging the future just eggs us on, but it never happens, for we circumvent ourselves, we just use the future to escape the present not realizing that we should truly be attendant in the present. The present , that nanosecond that we are living in is the only promise of time we have. We are not promised a decade, a year, a month, a week, a day, an hour, a minute, or even another second, for we only have, the now, that nanosecond we are living in at this very moment. We tend to ignore, and forget that we are not guaranteed any time, and that death can be upon us at a given time in any shape, size or form, for it is inevitable. The  labyrinth is nor life or death, it is suffering. How do you get out of the labyrinth of suffering? Well you can’t “suffering is universal” its one problem that everyone faces no matter the religion, ethnicity, or race we all face suffering. How to end suffering is one  conundrum that every religion is trying to solve. The only way out of the labyrinth of life, death, and suffering is to pretend it doesn't exist, even when lost in its maze pretend it is home, and when collapsing in whether your own or its enigma, try holding up the walls. Perhaps we are per-hapless, and stuck in this god-dang labyrinth. Another question that this novel has provoked and made me reconsider my understanding of it is, What happens to us when we die? Do we truly die? Or does the shell and home to our soul only die ? Do we have souls or is it just borrowed energy that is recycled? Most Christians and Muslims believe in heaven and hell, Buddhist on the other hand believe that people don’t have eternal souls but instead have a bundle of energy, and that energy is transitory, reincarnating endlessly until it eventually reaches enlightenment. Everything that is will cease to be and everything that comes together will come undone. Religion was created by the human mind in want of security, and a home for humanity can’t bear the thought of death being nothing, and everyone they love and themselves no longer existing. When people finally realized that death is inevitable and, that “We are all going”- William McKineley, and that our parents can’t save us or themselves and everyone the wades through time eventually gets dragged down to and that in which came together will eventually fall apart imperceptibly, the mind created the afterlife, to ease the pain of loss and to make our time in the labyrinth bearable, to give hope. Energy is never created nor destroyed, only borrowed and reused.

Awful things are made endurable because we are as indestructible as we believe, we  never need to be hopeless because we are never irreparably broken. In summation we are all lost and will not escape labyrinth. We are all borrowed energy which must be given back someday. There is some sort of higher power or something or someone greater, so we will not fail

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