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6/27/2021 Print Preview https://ng.cengage.com/static/nb/ui/evo/index.html?deploymentId=55295011033222781743676084&dockAppUid=101&eISBN=9781305665552&id=11… 1/3 1 2 3 4 5 Chapter 16: Description: 16-3 Professional Essay: Pretty Girl Book Title: Steps to Writing Well with Additional Readings Printed By: Dwight Bargainer ([email protected]) © 2017 Cengage Learning, Cengage Learning 16-3 Professional Essay: Pretty Girl To help you read this essay analytically. For two other professional essays in Part Two that make extensive use of description, see “To Bid the World Farewell” and “Two Ways of Viewing the River”. Rick Bragg An American journalist and writer of nonfiction, Rick Bragg was born in 1959 and raised in north Alabama. Heavily influenced by his family’s long tradition of oral storytelling, Bragg’s nonfiction novels focus on the dignity of those who grew up poverty-stricken in the hardscrabble areas of the rural South. A long-time journalist, Bragg joined the staff of the New York Times in 1994. Covering such stories as the Oklahoma City bombing, Bragg was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1996. Subsequently, Bragg has become a much sought-after speaker and reader based on the success of his non-fiction novels, most notably his memoir All Over But the Shoutin’. Bragg currently teaches in the journalism program at the University of Alabama. Pre-reading Thoughts: Think about a time in which you have been involved in what others considered to be a “lost cause,” a situation, project, or person that seemed to have little potential for success. How did it turn out? What kind of investment did it require from you? What was the reward for your involvement? Her name was perfect. She came to them in the dead of night, in the cold. She was more than half dead, starved down to bones, her hair completely eaten away by mange. She had been run off from more than one yard when she finally crept into an empty doghouse in the trees beyond my mother’s yard. At least she was out of the wind. They found her, my mother and brother, in the daylight of the next day. They could not even tell, at first, she was a dog. “And it broke my heart,” my mother said. They did not call the vet because she knew what the vet would do. She was too far gone to save; any fool could see that. My mama lives in the country and has to run off two wandering dogs a week, but this time, “I just couldn’t. She couldn’t even get up.” How do you run off a dog that cannot stand? javascript:// javascript:// 6/27/2021 Print Preview https://ng.cengage.com/static/nb/ui/evo/index.html?deploymentId=55295011033222781743676084&dockAppUid=101&eISBN=9781305665552&id=11… 2/3 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 The broke-down dog had stumbled on two people who hate to give up on anything, even a month-old newspaper. They save batteries that have not had a spark of anything in them for a long, long time. My mother keeps pens that stopped writing in 1974. My point is, there is always a little use, a little good, a little life left in anything, and who are they to decide when something is done for good. My brother Mark looked at her, at her tragic face, and named her. “Hey, Pretty Girl,” he said. It was like he could see beyond the ruin, or maybe into it. I don’t know. Her hips were bad, which was probably why she was discarded in the first place, and her teeth were worn down. Her eyes were clouded. But they fed her, and gave her water, and bathed her in burnt motor oil, the way my people have been curing the mange for generations. They got her looking less atrocious, and then they called the vet. The vet found she had heartworms. She was walking dead, anyway, at her age. It was then I saw her, still a sack of bones. It would be a kindness, I told my mother, to put her down. She nodded her head. A month later I pulled into the driveway to see a beautiful white German shepherd standing watch at the front of the house. It was not a miracle; her ailments did not magically cease. But together, my mother and brother had tended her, and even let her live in the house. She ate people food, and drank buttermilk out of an aluminum pie tin. She was supposed to last, at most, a few weeks or months. She lived three more years—decades, in dog years—following my brother to the garden to watch for snakes and listen for thunder. “I prayed for her,” my mother said. “Some people say you ain’t supposed to pray for a dog, but …” And then after the gift of years, Pretty Girl began to fail, and died. She is buried in the mountain pasture. The hot weather will be on us soon. The garden is already planted. Some things were planted according to science, according to soil and weather. And some things were planted according to lore, the shape of the moon, and more. That is fine with me. There are things we cannot explain, things beyond science, like how a man could name a ravaged and dying dog, and have her rise inside that, somehow, to make it true. Chapter 16: Description: 16-3 Professional Essay: Pretty Girl Book Title: Steps to Writing Well with Additional Readings 6/27/2021 Print Preview https://ng.cengage.com/static/nb/ui/evo/index.html?deploymentId=55295011033222781743676084&dockAppUid=101&eISBN=9781305665552&id=11… 3/3 Printed By: Dwight Bargainer ([email protected]) © 2017 Cengage Learning, Cengage Learning © 2021 Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this work may by reproduced or used in any form or by any means - graphic, electronic, or mechanical, or in any other manner - without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Answered Same DayJun 28, 2021

Answer To: 6/27/2021 Print Preview https://ng.cengage.com/static/nb/ui/evo/index.html?deploymentId=552950...

Sayani answered on Jun 28 2021
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Title: Why did the family save the dog in “Pretty Girl”?
16-3 Professional Essay: Pretty Girl
Contents
1. Introduction    3
2. Thesis Statement    3

3. Synopsis    3
4. Background    4
5. Conclusion    5
6. Works Cited    7
1. Introduction
As beautifully stated by a famous scholar that “Dogs are not our whole life, but they make our lives whole”, which clearly depicts the fact that dogs are the best creatures in Earth who loves us more than they love themselves. This paper will put a focus on Rick Bragg’s titled “Pretty Girl”, which illustrates the power of words and how choosing uplifting words to create intention can heal the issue of Southern Living. Bragg set the stage with his opening sentence “her name was perfect”, in order to grab the attention of the readers.
2. Thesis Statement
The thesis statement of “Pretty Girl” is “Her name was perfect”, the thesis by itself is implied. Bragg uses these few words in the opening sentence of his essay in order to create an ambience and a state of curiosity among the readers. As stated by Ellsworth, thesis represents a culmination of idea, which is essential to an understanding of the art of the author. Since from the beginning of the sentence the readers were left with a sense of curious and they lead towards further reading in order to find out that who is “she” mentioned in these lines. He uses several quotations and abbreviations in order to make the essay more interesting as well as arousing the sense of curiosity among the readers.
3. Synopsis
As collected from the essay Pretty Girl, Bragg’s positive uplifting and powerful words highlights his intentions to the readers. From the very beginning in his essay, he tried to create a sense of curiosity within the mind of the readers and he expresses a message for us. The sentences, which left us with a sense of curiosity is “her name was perfect” as her name became...
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