Wolf Larsen was a character in the book who never made it all the way through the book, but he tried very hard. He was a very strong, brutal man with almost no respect for human life. With all the people in the world, one dead person meant nothing to him. He was a patient man and usually kept himself under control. He was surprisingly smart and thoughtful for a pirate who lives on the sea. He loved the sea and knew many things about it, such as how to outwit his brother when he came near Wolf’s boat. Humphrey Van Weydon, or Hump as he was called on the boat, was a landlubber. He had a very comfortable job, and very soft skin showing how soft his life had been. He had barely any muscles and lived a very pampered living. He was a gentleman and very proper. Being proper, he was very intelligent and had a very extensive vocabulary. He seemed very surprised when he realized Wolf and he both shared some vocabulary words and meanings. Hump wasn’t used to living on a boat, but he soon learned to live on one. He became accepted on the boat with the crew. Wolf and Hump were very different people with few similarities. Wolf was very strong and bullied everyone around.
He believed everyone was insignificant, while Hump was nice, proper and believed everyone was unique and we all should live and that one person can make a big difference and change in the world. Wolf also tried to turn Hump into a strong man, since Hump was a wimp in everyone’s eye on the boat. Wolf had one disadvantage though, during his voyages, he read many books, but was never able to say what he read or really talk about anything he read. When Hump came along, they shared and exchanged knowledge and each learned new things about the One scene that stands out the most from the book was when Wolf Larsen was engaged in a battle with his brother. Wolf played Hide-N- Seek with his brother behind fog on the seas for a long time. During this fight, Hump and Maud Brewster, a girl whom Hump was in love with and was trapped on the boat too, got on a small boat and sailed to safety away from Wolf’s boat to freedom. Only later after Hump saw Wolf’s boat stranded on the island where Hump and Maud were living did he hear from Wolf that his brother came on board during the night and offered everyone a chance to get away and paid them to go on his boat. Wolf’s boat didn’t have any crew left Sea Wolf and Dove surprisingly had many similarities between them. Sea Wolf was a story was told on the sea and in first person just as Dove had been done. In the sea, Hump worked under Wolf Larsen as a crewman
Founding Brothers Book Review
The book being critiqued in the following review is Founding Brothers by Joseph Ellis. Ellis’ goal in writing this book was to define the political events and achievements that gained historical significance because they framed the successive history of the United States. Ellis wrote on this specific topic because he felt the need to argue the fact that the American Revolution and the greatness ...