Please check if this is a good annotated bibliography

icon
Related questions
Question
Please check if this is a good annotated bibliography
Michael Finocchiaro, an IT specialist and the author of the novel Sophie's playlist, provides an
extensive and well-written analysis of Omar El Akkad's "American War." Michael Finocchiaro
produces a very deep review that examines the thing he likes and the things that bugged him of the
novel while contributing his own opinions. He is knowledgeable and provides great insight not only
through the novel "American war," but the author Omar El Akkad.
Finocchiaro goes on to say that there is almost an absence of black people, except for the protagonist
Sarat, and there are descriptions of racism. He wants people to see that racism part of the novel, as
Finocchiaro goes on to say that the main characters (soldiers, rebels, and survivors) are white. No
Hispanics or Blacks. He also discusses how he would like to also have more justifications as to how all
the land from Texas and California gets swallowed by Mexico, particularly if the cartel was not at the
botlom of it.
This article praises Omar's use of symbolism to portray human action that happened in this era. He
says that she is an interesting, but also a tragic figure. Furthermore, he states how it was difficult to
have sympathy for her at times. He discusses how some of her actions were unpredictable, not to say
that it was almost caricatural, while her actions seem realistically driven by her suffering. He also
praises how the wartime writing was good and it is primarily action and circumstance that drives this
novel. Finocchiaro is curious to see where the author goes next with his quite vivid and emboldened
imagination. He further relates it to The Walking Dead movie mashed up with The Man in the High
Castle in a way.
This review should prove helpful to all readers as it was incredibly useful to me. I discovered
connections to racism that one would not usually think. It expanded my knowledge about the
American war novel and Omar El Akkad, providing further understanding about the good and the bad
about this book. And he also makes connections to the real world.
Transcribed Image Text:Michael Finocchiaro, an IT specialist and the author of the novel Sophie's playlist, provides an extensive and well-written analysis of Omar El Akkad's "American War." Michael Finocchiaro produces a very deep review that examines the thing he likes and the things that bugged him of the novel while contributing his own opinions. He is knowledgeable and provides great insight not only through the novel "American war," but the author Omar El Akkad. Finocchiaro goes on to say that there is almost an absence of black people, except for the protagonist Sarat, and there are descriptions of racism. He wants people to see that racism part of the novel, as Finocchiaro goes on to say that the main characters (soldiers, rebels, and survivors) are white. No Hispanics or Blacks. He also discusses how he would like to also have more justifications as to how all the land from Texas and California gets swallowed by Mexico, particularly if the cartel was not at the botlom of it. This article praises Omar's use of symbolism to portray human action that happened in this era. He says that she is an interesting, but also a tragic figure. Furthermore, he states how it was difficult to have sympathy for her at times. He discusses how some of her actions were unpredictable, not to say that it was almost caricatural, while her actions seem realistically driven by her suffering. He also praises how the wartime writing was good and it is primarily action and circumstance that drives this novel. Finocchiaro is curious to see where the author goes next with his quite vivid and emboldened imagination. He further relates it to The Walking Dead movie mashed up with The Man in the High Castle in a way. This review should prove helpful to all readers as it was incredibly useful to me. I discovered connections to racism that one would not usually think. It expanded my knowledge about the American war novel and Omar El Akkad, providing further understanding about the good and the bad about this book. And he also makes connections to the real world.
Expert Solution
steps

Step by step

Solved in 2 steps

Blurred answer