As a 2016 High school graduate, and a current part time college student at Middle Ga State, my set of skills in writing, research, and professional proofreading are currently honed to today's modern data flow. No writing topic is too hard or complex, it's just a matter of how thorough it needs to be done.
Here is an excerpt from work I did in school:
In the story “The Outsider” we find a protagonist that has a problem identifying exactly who and what he is. This may be the result of his lengthy incarceration or the fact that he isn’t human. We know this last fact preemptively only because we are the reader. As the story progresses the protagonist discovers for himself that he is indeed a monster. But what outside perspectives help him define his own identity?
This question brings forth even more questions. How do you discover who you are without an environment that allows you to compare one social phenomenon to another, allowing you to create a mental map of your own thoughts, feelings, and perspectives? How do we differentiate original thought from ideas fractured off of themes we gleam from the sporadic events in our daily lives? In the story the protagonist goes in search of others, any one really, to help discover who he was. But in the truest form, you are only yourself for as long as you are your only reference. So, by direct correlation, could the protagonist have had what he was searching for from the very beginning?