Wednesday, March 3, 2010

flying aces of world war 1

this book is medium diction example: the german armies were forced to retreat. This book is structured in chapters. When an old subject ends and a new subject starts, there's a chapter. It goes back and forth from German people to British people to French people. The main topic is flying aces and it all fits in because each chapter is about a French flyer or German flyer or British flyer who invented something or did something amazing in that time.

4 comments:

  1. Kurt,

    This is good explanation of your book. I like the way you give examples to ground your discussion in the book. How did you find this book? Are you really interested in flying or World War I? Are you learning lots of new things? What sorts of things? How is this book different from a fiction book?

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  3. I was given the book from my grandfather. I am interested in plans from World War I. I am learning new things for example Georges Guynemer is a French aces ho disappeared well attacking an enemy plan. This book is different from a fiction book because that every thing in this book is documented in history.

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  4. Kurt,

    What's the most interesting thing you've learned from this book? How else is this book different from fiction? Think of how it's structured and how it's written. For example, is there a plot to this book? Is it a continuous story? What is interesting about planes?

    Also, be sure to re-read your posts before you publish them. And please put the words "plane," "who," and "while" on your spelling list.

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