How I Did It. And it was, like, really real anger, because they're, like, 'Oh we found this site with free study guides,' and then they're scrolling and they don't see what they want.
But as Yagan said, " that's the best kind of hate mail to get, is we need more product. And so we spent that summer, we hired a couple of editors, and their foil was to get a hundred SparkNotes up by the fall, and the rest is history.
Before the launch and hate mail Yagan and Coyne had turned to the most convenient workforce: other college students. They're, like, 'Wait a minute. You're going to pay me to write a paper? After all, she professed to have empathy for her flawed but ultimately deeply human characters. Writing SparkNotes can get your endorphins flowing in the same strange way that taking a standardized test does.
When you take the job, you receive a style guide—essentially SparkNotes on writing SparkNotes. Unlike some of its competitors, SparkNotes subdivides its summary and analysis: a chunk of summary, a chunk of analysis, et cetera. Any given SparkNote is divided into seven parts with nineteen chapters of roughly equal size. To write my Note, I put myself in the same state as my imagined reader: a state of desperation. I wrote the detailed summary and analysis portions throughout the a week, but I left myself just twelve hours before the deadline to pound through the rest.
What trait is Atticus Finch best known for: his integrity, his morality, or his dignity? With twenty minutes to spare, I spell-checked and turned it in.
Jean Louise, age twenty-six, returns to Maycomb for a visit with her beloved father, Atticus. She flirts with an old boyfriend, Hank. Jean Louise, disgusted, wanders around town in a blind rage. Jean Louise wanders around Maycomb for a while, overcome with nostalgia and nausea. Eventually, her Uncle Jack slaps sense into her, and she suddenly realizes that her destiny is to remain in Maycomb, though not to marry Hank. The original LitCharts homepage, circa And then LitCharts ran on autopilot for five years as we worked on other stuff.
But then we noticed something strange—the website was taking off on its own, with no marketing, advertising, or help from us at all:. As our traffic grew, we started to get thousands of requests for more LitCharts.
So we made more. On May 5, , Mr. Hillegass passed away at the age of Use CliffsNotes literature guides as a study aid — a tool to help you understand literature.
Most people use CliffsNotes by reading a chapter of the book or an act of the play, and then reading the corresponding section in the CliffsNotes. Alternatively, read the entire book or play, and then review with CliffsNotes. Some people think using CliffsNotes guides is cheating, but it's not.
Avoid plagiarism by knowing how to cite CliffsNotes , whether it's a print or online source of information.
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