life as we knew it review by: alex jones

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Page 1: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones
Page 2: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Plot:Rising action: When the story is building up for the

best moment. • Miranda is worried about her grades, skating lessons, her mother

worrying more about what Jonny wants to do than what she wants to do, etcetera, etcetera. Then Miranda’s class is talking about a meteorite that is supposed to collide with the moon and they were assigned homework because of the phenomenon. It’s the same for her French class. They are required to write out a report on what they think the effect on the moon will be and they have to write it in French. But Miranda is thinking that it’s just another excuse to give out homework. They make their way home and Miranda does he projects and everything and she thinks that “It’s not like the moon is going to hit us, it’s just going to hit the moon.” She doesn’t think the impact is going to have an effect on the earth, that it’s not something worth writing about.

Page 3: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Climax: The most intense and exciting part of the story. There can be multiple climaxes.

• Everyone’s watching the moon waiting to see what’s going to happen. They think it’s going to be something small that is fun to see. But their curiousness soon turns to terror as the moon is hit with a meteor and catastrophic effects take place: The moon receives a huge crater and is knocked closer to the earth. People scream, cry, run for their cars, and even sing the national anthem as panic bubbles to the limit. The collision causes phone problems, satellite and land line, to hit everyone. Satellite problems also include television reception problems which make looking out for the news tedious work. Gas is also affected so produce trucks can’t reach them and prices shoot up to 9-10 dollars a gallon. So, they have a limited amount food, gas, and even heat.

Page 4: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Conflict:• Man vs nature: • -The characters of the story are constantly tested by the weather changes

that the collision of the moon and meteorite create like: ash contaminated air, freezing temperatures, blizzards, etcetera. Miranda has to face the blizzards many times protecting her family, one time in which she was knocked into the snow after a giant gust of wind hit her all because she was protecting her brother. The collision’s effect starts to create rain and thunderstorms and it knocks trees down onto the roads making the Evan’s traveling from store to store to scavenge for items more difficult. It causes flashes of power surges and brown outs as the lightning struck power lines.

• Man vs self: • -Miranda the most out of everyone has this struggle in the book. She continues to have

negative thoughts on her life then after, thought about pulling through and making it. Matt, after he breaks his leg, thinks that he won’t ever be able to help his family and that he will be invalid for the rest of his life. Mrs. Evans or “Mom” is dealing with a temporarily sprained leg and she just can’t hand not being able to help her children so she ends up walking on it anyway.

• Man vs Society:• -Miranda’s family is forced to fight for their food as they move through the

superstore’s near-empty shelves. Strangers try to steal their buggy, their food and anything they can get their hands on.

Page 5: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Falling Action: when the story calms a little. (A little rest from the climax of the story)

• The weather is stormier than it used to be and it doesn’t see the sun like it used to. People start to leave to find better areas as they start to figure that staying means scarcity. So Miranda’s family divvies and saves as much resources as possible so they can last as long as possible. Some of Miranda’s friends left leaving her with Megan, Dan, Sammy, and her swim team. But they soon find out that a West Nile Virus has reached their area so they hardly see each other anymore. They soon stop swimming altogether. Miranda’s dad comes with batteries, boxes and boxes of canned produce, blankets, electric lamps, and so much more. It all but reduced her mom to a puddle of tears. Then they said their good byes and her Dad and Lisa left for Lisa’s grandparent’s home to make sure they’re ok. Every once and a while her Dad sends letters to confirm that they are fine and everything is all right.

Page 6: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Rising action: When the story is building up for the best moment.

• Ash descends on them and pollutes the air and water giving them even less options and resources. When the snow comes it comes hard. The ash pollutes the snow and gives the heavy thick flakes a possibility of illness. Miranda goes out skating and skiing with her siblings. But she’s got a limited amount of time before the ashy air makes them cough, so minimal exercise is accomplished. The air continuously gets colder and it becomes harder to stay outside and exercise.

Page 7: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Climax: The most intense and exciting part of the story.

• Miranda’s whole family is sick except her. Jonny’s sickness seems to be the worst as he thrashes around his bed rejecting help in a fit of illness. Mom’s is moderate. She is in a cold sweat and is rejecting her tea and aspirin. Matt’s illness is the least of the three. He is just shaky and in a cold sweat. He can stand but can’t walk great distances. He can’t go up the stairs. He can’t work for the family. So although it is the smallest of the three I think it effects him the greatest. Miranda races to her Dad’s skis and forgets to put multiple pairs of socks on so she slips and falls frequently as she zooms to the hospital that is miles away. When she makes it she asks the reception ladies if Peter, Her mother’s boyfriend was there. But he wasn’t there. He was dead. He died on the job as did most of the doctors and nurses in the hospital

Page 8: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Falling Action: when the story calms a little. (gets ready for the resolution)

• She goes home and takes care of her family giving them baths, feeding them, Getting items that they request for, etcetera. But she becomes worried about her Dad and Lisa and of course the baby Rachel. So Miranda goes on a journey to the post office to make sure that they’re alright. She notices how empty everything is and all the dead pets that were left behind when people moved away. She finds the post office but it is closed. All seemed lost. Miranda was getting ready to pass away right on the office steps but in a desire to get yellow paper she finds that miraculously Town Hall was open on Fridays and it was a Friday! So she went to town hall. . .

Page 9: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Characters• Miranda: Miranda is the main character so she is a major character in the book. She is a

dynamic character in the story because at the beginning, she complained about how she feels like people from a church are taking her friend away from her, how she doesn’t have a boyfriend, and how she thinks that her step mom, Lisa, is annoying until she does something nice for her. But then, a meteorite crashes into the moon and her life takes a turn for the worst. She stars to get tired of eating the same foods over and over, her brother is goes to camp and she becomes angry with him, she feels like her life is over. She becomes stubborn because she is insistent on thinking that things can’t get any worse so she developed some optimism. As the story furthers, Miranda finds out how much she loves her mother, how much she’s willing to do for Jonny, how bad things really are, etc. Miranda is a protagonist because she looks after her family and virtually does anything she can do to save them. (Watching over them and taking care of them while their sick, limiting her food in take so Jonny can survive, etc.)

• Mom: She is one of the major characters in the story because she’s she continuously breaks her ankle and has to be tended to by her children. She starts off as kind, person that’s willing to give to charity anything she doesn’t need. So she is obviously a protagonist. She is also a dynamic character because when the moon got hit with a meteorite, she became more worried about her family then strangers she doesn’t know about. She starts getting more irritable because she has to watch out for not only her kids but also her ex-husband, who is now a good friend of hers, his wife Lisa, her boyfriend Peter, and Mrs. Nesbitt. She starts thinking that if you’re not her children, her ex-husband and his wife, Mrs. Nesbitt, or Peter, you’re not worth the trouble. She thinks that sharing is a privilege that they don’t have. So she stays a protagonist. She hates being helpless to her children and starts to walk on her injured ankle.

Page 10: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Characters • Jonny: He is a major character because he is Miranda’s brother and they mention his love of

baseball many times throughout the story. He’s a protagonist because he is pretty oblivious to what’s going on in the story for a little while, and then after he goes to camp, he comes home and gives a toast to the family’s well-being. He is dynamic because in the beginning of the book he was innocent and young but the moon’s effect on the earth aged him figuratively a couple of years and then he started worrying about his family and he volunteered to leave the family to find a better place to live in but he was still the youngest in the family so Miranda turned him down. He learns how to ski better so he could escape if the others pass away (The same with Miranda and Matt.). He becomes brawny from chopping trees for wood and helps with the heavy lifting.

• Mrs. Nesbitt: She is a major character because Miranda’s family takes care of her and visits her house frequently. She’s a protagonist because she bakes cookies for them as much as possible and helped them to gather food when the moon caused global problems. She went from store to store with them to buy out everything that was left in each. She’s pretty static because the whole time she feels like since she was born in her house that she has to die in her house. So, she is being stubborn when it came to moving in to Miranda’s house and she gives out her things to each of the Evans in Miranda’s family. Inevitably, she does die in her house.

• Matt: He is a major character in the book because he’s Miranda’s brother and she looks to him if she’s worried about something. He’s a protagonist because he helps calm Miranda down and he’s so good that he stays out in the thunder-storming rain to chop down trees for the family’s warmth. He’s dynamic because as the novel goes on he gets more grim and worried. That he feels they should prepare for the worst. He becomes ill like Jonny and his mother but his cold is mild yet he is the most effected because thinks he will never be able to help the family so he becomes frustrated

Page 11: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Theme and Resolution T R-The moral of a story -How the story ends

• Theme:• -Never give up• Nearly every time Miranda’s family was in trouble Miranda came to

their rescue enduring some troubles herself but she persevered.• “I knew what I had to do next and that was to get rid of the piece of

wood that caused the backfire. I went to the door, took a few deep breaths, then came back in and opened the woodstove.

• The smoke was overwhelming, I raced back outside and grabbed a handful of snow to rub against my burning eyes. I swallowed some of the snow. . . I went back into the sunroom. The smoke was still incredibly thick and I thought I’d cough my lungs up. I crawled over to the stove and put on the mitts. I reached in and pulled out the smoking log. Even through the mitt, I could tell the log was wet. Hot, wet, and steaming and smoking. I juggled it between the mitts, crawled to the door and threw it out.” (Pfeffer pg. 303)

Page 12: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Theme and Resolution• Resolution: This story ends with a kind of answer to a

question that Jonny asked.• - “A while ago Jonny asked me why I was still keeping

a journal, who I was writing it for. I’ve asked myself that a lot, especially in the really bad times. Sometimes I’ve thought I’m keeping it for people 200 years from now, so they can see what our lives were like. Sometimes I’ve thought I’m keeping it for that day when people no longer exist but butterflies can read. But today, when I’m 17 and warm and well fed, I’m keeping this journal for myself so I can always remember life as we knew it, life as we know it, and for the time when I am no longer in the sunroom.” (Pfeffer pg. 337)

Page 13: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

M ood Definition

How the story makes you feel • In the story, Miranda has to deal with a lot of hardships and negativities

that come to mind. So I think the mood is discouraging.• “There was no point getting off the ground. I sat there, holding on to the

useless lamp, waiting for Jonny. . .”(Pfeffer pg. 261)• “But I didn’t care. I’d made it to town and that was all I planned for. I’d go

to the post office and find word from Dad that he and Lisa and baby Rachel were alive and well.

• It was eerie standing on the main street of town, seeing no one, hearing no one, smelling nothing but the stench of death. Then I got to the post office and saw it was dead too…” (Pfeffer pg. 331)

• “The guard didn’t seem to be in any hurry to take my message to Peter. First he made me write it out, and then he read it, and then he demanded I show him some ID. Which, of course, I didn’t have on me. I begged him to take the message to Peter. He grinned. I could tell he was used to people begging him for things and he liked it.”(Pfeffer pg. 201)

Page 14: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Mood• An epidemic of deadly colds breaks out and reaches Miranda’s family

but it doesn’t affect her. I think the mood in these passages is frustrating.

• “You can try fluids,” Linda said. “If you have any food, try to make them eat. They’ll need all the strength they can get.” Maggie shook her head. “Save the food for yourself, hon,” she said. “You look healthy enough…”(Pfeffer pg. 297)

• “Sometimes I think about everything I went through when they were all sick and it makes me so angry. How dare they die now?”(Pfeffer pg. 323)

• “Mom was close to unconscious when the tea was ready, but we lifted her head and forced the tea and aspirin down her throat. . . She was shivering terribly, so I took one of the blankets off my mattress and draped it around her.

• Jon was harder. His arms were swinging around so wildly that he hit me in the jaw and knocked me over.”(Pfeffer pg. 294)

Page 15: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

Mood• Some of her friends die in the story escaping from the hardships they faced. I think

the mood is depressing.• “I need Dr. Elliot,” I said. “Peter Elliot. Where is he?”• “Elliot . . . He died on Saturday, didn’t he, Maggie?” Linda said. • “No, I think it was Friday,” Maggie replied. It took me a moment to

realize they were saying Peter was dead. Peter who had done all he could to protect us and care for us had died. (Pfeffer pg. 296)

• • “Mrs. Nesbitt died. I don’t know when, but she was in bed and I’d like to think she

died in her sleep.” (Pfeffer pg. 240) • • Megan Wayne died of starvation. “. . . Her mother summoned me one morning and

we prayed over Megan’s remains. She asked me to bury Megan in their backyard, but the ground was frozen and I knew I couldn’t do it alone. I went back to the church to ask for help and when we returned to the house we found Mrs. Wayne had hung herself,” Reverend said. (Pfeffer pg. 221)

Page 16: Life as We Knew It Review  By: Alex Jones

S etting

• In the book “life as we know it” by Susan Beth Pfeffer, the setting takes place on Howell Rd in Pennsylvania and Miranda’s school. The people in Miranda Evans’ neighborhood are low in food, water, gas, even good air which causes a hazardous environment as people fight for wagons to carry their food in and fight for the food itself. Their neighborhood becomes a hazardous place as gangs bring guns to steal empty houses’ plywood, a deadly cold hits most of the citizens, and more. The main character’s school is affected in a lot of bad ways: one way is swim club, which was closed due lack of electricity causing the sanitation to be filthy. Another is, hot lunch service since the food supply is shortening and it goes on and on. Her family is also affected at her house: Their food becomes canned and powdered, their heating goes down because of the gas, their personalities change {mostly they all start to get irritable (everyone except Jonny, Dad, and Mrs. Nesbitt)} etc. More to add to the list of problems are, ash covering the air killing vegetation and causing the air to becomes contaminated, her friends start to move away, more teachers and students are missing, Horton, Miranda’s family’s cat, is missing, the list goes on.

No more produce is coming in so they have to survive with what they have and what they can get/ find.

The water supply has been polluted with ash and is no longer reliable. This also happened to their pool. No electricity means no pool cleaner, no pool cleaner means dirty nasty polluted water.