The quote, comment, and question (QCQ) method of analyzing text is supposed to be a good way of connecting your ideas to what you already know and to expand your thinking. This technique is not necessarily used to analyze text but you are supposed to use the text as a certain starting point to bigger ideas. When I analyzed chapter 14 of the book titled Because of Romek, I was a bit confused as to what I was supposed to connect my ideas to. So I just analyzed the quote I chose. Because of Romek is actually a really great book. What captures readers into that book is the amazing story that David Faber tells. It seems almost impossible that humans would do that to one another. That they would torture each other, force one another to work to death, and enjoy seeing them die. Perhaps of where I live affects my attitude towards this, since I am not exposed to humans slaughtering one another it makes me believe humans do not do that to themselves. Anyways, since it is an amazing story it contains a lot of amazing quotes. From those quotes I somehow began heading towards the direction of why? Why would people do that to one another? Lots of questions spawned from that topic. I got from the topic of the holocaust to many other topics, one that included aliens. This QCQ method, that I was introduced too, is very great in analyzing text. From experience, I know that asking lots of questions on a text and commenting on it can connect my ideas to many bigger things.