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The Beginning of HAH

The Beginning of HAH. By Chang Lee Ryan Williamson Adrian Torres Trevor Keplor. By Lain Lawrence. The Wreckers. Read by Chang Lee. How is it Historical…….

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The Beginning of HAH

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  1. The Beginning of HAH • By • Chang Lee • Ryan Williamson • Adrian Torres • Trevor Keplor

  2. By Lain Lawrence The Wreckers Read by Chang Lee

  3. How is it Historical……. • The wreckers wreck lost ships with a false beacon light to get their “loot”. They might also be called land pirates…get it? • The wreckers and pirates are illegal people who steal from innocent by passers. • The pirates and wreckers are still here today in the form of robbers and thieves.

  4. Hist. Cont. • This has really happened in the past as it does in the present and most likely the future. • People use this form of “evilness” to create stories of piracy/robbery/thievery fiction.

  5. Plot • Ok, the plot is sort of simple. • It has a very happy ending. • There was a conflicts but there were also resolves. • This plot happens over less than a week. • You can read what happens on the front page of our website.

  6. Characters • This book has one main character but a few minor characters. • Main= John---important!!! • Minors= • The dad, -loyal, sense of humor Mary, -kind, Mary’s uncle, -caring, stern Stumps, -evil, greed Ellie, -kind, pitiful and the Priest.-a lot of evil, smart

  7. Char. Cont. • The book is part of a series. • The book did leave me hanging for more. • The author did a beautiful job of creating the external and internal background of his characters.

  8. Point of View • The author’s tone had a tad of mystery and fear. • It was written in 1st point of view. • The voices brought me in to the story and made me feel like the main character. • The tone had a great correlation to the book and its mood to the plot.

  9. Setting • The story takes place on an island close to London and Spain. • The place is really important because the coast of the island is the reason for the whole conflict. • The story wasn’t really extreme at all. • It shows an era of piracy and illegal stuff such as smuggling.

  10. Themes • The theme to this book is that “The real truth is the most difficult to hear”. • He tries to convey the ideas that people wont know the truth just from assumptions but from the horse’s mouth. • This book also sounds like none of the other books from the group. • These ideas show how society will usually act.

  11. Style • His writing style was friendly and inviting. • It was descriptive. • It provides some imagery but not a whole lot. It was more of a conversation type. • They add power to the book because the book needs a lot of conversation to go with the theme.

  12. Also consider • The book appeals to the emotional people. • The book concerns pirates with family issues and hidden truths. • I thought it was not funny and serious. • I thought nothing was funny in this book. • The way a character in this book killed off his family. • The author had choices I strongly agreed with. • The ending was not so satisfying since it was a sort of like a cliff hanger.

  13. The Voyage of Plunder (Next 6 slides) • Author: Michele Torrey • Read By: Ryan Williamson

  14. Why The Voyage of Plunder is Historical Fiction: • The Voyage of Plunder took place in the 1690s and it focuses on the basic aspects of pirates during that time. Pirates were real then and still are real. This story could possibly be real because it includes real places, accurate pirate depiction, and realist action. Pirates did take people captive if they surrendered quickly, which was the situation Daniel and Timothy were in (see the characters slide). They did affect history by interfering with ships carrying goods from one point to another, trade was and still is needed in order to receive goods the country needs. They negatively affected history by looting ships set out on the ocean, destined for a specific point.

  15. Plot: a Short Summary • Daniel Markham was fourteen years old when his step mother, Faith, became pregnant and some problems came up for his father in Boston. His dad decided that they would move to Jamaica on his ship, the Gray Pearl. Unfortunately, they encountered pirates on the way, the ship was burned, the crew was killed, and only Daniel and Faith survived and were taken hostage. Faith was brought back to Boston to have her baby, but Daniel was forced to stay on the pirate's ship, the Tempest Galley. It was headed by Josiah Black, the most wanted pirate in the world. For the next few years Daniel spent learning the pirate ways and looting ships, but he did not consider himself a pirate. Until one day the pirate ship he was on encountered an English military vessel. The Tempest Galley disabled them and started to sail away but Daniel got in a boat and sailed to the English ship, ready to give up his life as a pirate. The English ignored Daniel when he said he was a forced pirate and threw him in jail. Later he was put on trial and sentenced to a hanging. Josiah Black showed up on the day Daniel was supposed to be hung and took his place because he was Daniel's real father who had sworn to protect him. 

  16. Characters • Daniel Markham- Antagonist, dad dies, becomes a forced pirate • Daniel’s Father- merchant, killed by pirates • Faith Markham- marries Daniel’s father, becomes pregnant, released after captured • Josiah Black- most wanted pirate, turns out to be Daniel’s real father, captain of the Tempest Galley • Basil Higgins- trustworthy chef of the Tempest Galley • Fisk- captain of the Defiance, engaged Daniel in a fight • Caesar- taught Daniel sword fighting , Daniel saves his life

  17. Point of View and Setting • First person- Daniel’s point of view, descriptive and rebellious • Took place in the 1690s in Boston and the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. The time span of the book is about 13 years. The setting is very practical because the many of characters are pirates and pirates spent most of their time looting ships, especially back in the late 1600s.

  18. Themes • Force can lead to giving in-Daniel is forced to become a pirate against his will, but he does participate in the killing and looting so he is somewhat giving in. • Truth can be withheld for protection- Daniel is not told until the end, when he is older, that his real dad is Josiah Black. Had he been told earlier, he would have denied it or gone crazy. • Fathers are protectors- This is why Josiah chooses to be kind and protective towards Daniel.

  19. Style • Through the narrator, Daniel, the author shows that his style of writing is descriptive so that he can make a point. In the book, Daniel chooses to be rebellious, so perhaps this author also rebels to make a point. Daniel rebels to make sure the pirates know that he is a normal person, not one of them.

  20. The Giant Rat of SumatraBy: Sid Fleischman • Read by: Adrian Torres

  21. When • The Giant Rat of Sumatra takes place in California when it was still owned by the Spanish. During the story, there is a war between America and Mexico, in which America ends up winning.

  22. Plot • The story is told from a young boy's view. He is taken aboard an infamous Pirate Ship called The Giant Rat of Sumatra and put to work as a cabin boy. When the ship sets anchor for good in California, the boy must find a way home, but at the same time, is building a personal relationship with the Captain.

  23. Characters • Shipwreck- The narrator/ cabin boy of The Giant Rat of Sumatra • Captain Gallows- Captain of The Giant Rat of Sumatra • Senorita Wildcat- Captain Gallows' long lost partner and friend.

  24. Setting and View • The story is told in first person point of view by a cabin boy trying to find his way home to Boston. • The story takes place in California.

  25. Pirates are real people inside • Pirates of any shape, size, or ferocity are still humans and have personal emotions and problems. • The story portrays this by giving the captain's history throughout. • In the end, the captain even falls in love and gets married.

  26. Style • The writer tells the story in an adventurous style. He portrays visual concepts with great detail. • His words seem to flow in a form that makes the book easy to read and easy to understand.

  27. By L. A. Meyer Read by Trevor Kepler Bloody Jack

  28. Historical In Bloody Jack, the protagonist is part of London’s very lower class. This is what caused her try and get on a navy ship. This is the exact same reason pirates became pirates. Piracy wasn’t some fairy tale, it was extremely dangerous, but many still took the risk. They did so because they desperately needed money. Bloody Jack is also a great tool to show that pirates weren’t just blood thirsty savages, although some probably were. They were generally desperate people who had nothing to lose.

  29. The Plot • Bloody Jack has a fairly complex plot. It involves Mary ‘Jacky’ Faber keeping her gender secret, all while they are hunting pirates. This is easy at first but then she starts to mature. This is where it gets a lot more difficult. And while all of this is happening she makes friends and then has then taken away in the battles throughout the book. In one such battle she saves her friend Jamie by shooting his assailant. This is where she earned the nickname Bloody Jack. Unfortunately for her the crew found out her little secret when she was kidnapped by pirates. She was saved, but was then sent to a prep school.

  30. Characters • The main character is Jacky. She forms many relationships throughout the novel with her fellow crew members and especially the other ship boys, Benjy, Willy, Tink, Davy, and a bit more so with Jamie. All of whom become great friends for the rest of their lives, however long that may be. An Irish crew member by the name of Liam became a father figure Jacky desperately needed. He taught her how to be a sailor and how to play music on a flute. • The antagonists are the pirates, obviously, and a man by the name of Sloat. He is a vile vermin of a man and Jacky ends up stabbing him when he attempts to rape her. Just desserts in the end, eh?

  31. Point of view • Bloody Jack is told in the first-person point of view, which greatly increases the entertainment value of the book. It helps when you are figuring things out as the main character does. It is more suspenseful to say the least. This also allows you to truly feel for Jacky through the entirety of the book.

  32. Setting • The story is set in the early 19th century and begins in one of London’s not so grand regions. After Jacky finds her dead role model in a deserted alley she leaves town and gets taken aboard a British Man-o-War. This is where the majority of the novel takes place. Jacky goes through a lot of emotional growth over the next few years, this is a real turning point in her life.

  33. Theme • The obvious theme for this book is life is tough and unrelenting. Jacky goes through so much that its hard to believe she didn’t give up. Of coarse if she did the entire story would be a waste. I believe this book teaches a strong lesson to those who take their time and really read it. And anything you actually come against isn’t going to be a difficult to accomplish as what happened in Bloody Jack, so it is good to learn to tough it out.

  34. THE END OF HAH PRESENTATION • BYE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • NOW YOU NEED TO GO TAKE THE TEST AT OUR TEST PAGE. • Try to get a 100% whooooooo!!!

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