To fight for thee country and that retirement check <span />
In "All Rivers Run to the Sea" by Elie Wiesel, it shows the power of Holocaust literature by using the author's real experiences as a testimony to the Jewish culture. His memories paint that the Jewish had loving families and went through great despair because of the hatred towards them. They emphasize the resilience his people had to rise above their painful experiences.
The author of "The Black Snake" is excited about snakes, while the author of "A Narrow Fellow in the Grass" is serious and fearful about them.