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Not What You Meant?  There are 37 definitions for Virginia.

Hamilton, Virginia (Edith) 1936–: Critical Essay by Ethel L. Heins

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About 2 pages (507 words)
Virginia Hamilton Summary

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Few writers of fiction for young people are as daring, inventive, and challenging to read—or to review—as Virgina Hamilton. Frankly making demands on her readers, she nevertheless expresses herself in a style essentially simple and concise—though often given to outbursts of intense feeling. And meeting those demands, the reader not only forgives but learns to enjoy her small lapses into obscurity, which a less subtle writer would find intolerable.

Not quite fifteen, Tree (short for Teresa) [the protagonist in Sweet Whispers, Brother Rush] was bright and self-reliant; every day she came home from school promptly, her whole existence centered on looking after Dab, her retarded older brother, whom she adored. Ever since she could remember, they had had no father and were mysteriously devoid of other relatives—except for their mother, Viola, "whom they called Muh Vy, Muh Vy, spoken M'Vy…. [But M'Vy] was absent weeks at a time, working as a practical nurse, coming home occasionally on a Saturday to leave some money and lay in groceries. Sharing her profound aloneness with the sad, simple seventeen-year-old boy, Tree knew "quiet for years, the way other children knew noise and lots of laughter."

This is a free excerpt of 191 words. There are 507 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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what is the argument virginia hamilton is trying to make in house of dies drear? what is the thesis?
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Hamilton, Virginia (Edith) 1936–: Critical Essay by Ethel L. Heins from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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