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Family Sticks together in The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
The main idea of the book was no matter what happens family stick together. This is the story of
Jeannette Walls life told by Jeannette Walls. The title The Glass Castle was a dream the at Rex Walls
planned to give the family a mansion in the dessert and call it the glass castle after he found gold.
Jeannette's family consisted of Father and Mother, Rex and Rose Mary Walls, and three siblings
(Lori, Brian, Maureen). This book starts with Jeannette going to a party in New York. When she
spots her mother rummaging through trash cans. Embarrassed, Jeannette goes home changing her
mind about going to the party. I guess that was a place to start or a good place to wonder how she
got to the point of embarrassment of her parents. The Walls family was always on the move. Rex
Walls would depict these sudden moves as "the skedaddle." In all actuality, once paranoia set in or
Rex Walls' job ended the family picked up and moved everything. The children had to learn that
family stuck together no matter what. The family slept in cars and hotels for majority of the Walls
children lives. Jeannette was the favorite of all the Walls children. Spending little time in many
different places the Walls children could not rely on making friends. Brain Walls spent time
exploring the dessert while on the move. Moving around was what Walls family did a good portion
of Jeannette's life. Now the Walls family had moment of stability for a little while. Rose Mary Walls
inherited a house from her
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Comparing A Protest Against The Sun And A Perfect Day For...
The reality and illusion of the beach "A perfect day for Bananafish" by J.D. Salinger and "A Protest
Against the Sun" by Steven Millhauser are two different stories that are held in a similar place, the
beach. In both stories we have the main characters, Seymour, a retired soldier that felt he didn't
belong to the new society, and Elizabeth, a girl that was trying to be closer to her family. They found
the beach as the perfect place to find the reality of what was happening and dismissed the illusions
of their lives. In the first part of "A perfect day for Bananafish" we have Muriel, Seymour's wife.
Seymour was a retired soldier that had psychological issues. She was talking with her mother, who
looks to be very concern because of Seymour, but Muriel didn't care, she just wanted to be in the
beach with his husband even he is not mentally good. The same happened to Elizabeth, she went to
the beach to leave for a while the responsibilities and by the time she was there she realized that the
beach was an opportunity to assert her family feelings. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This is the external problem that Seymour was suffering, the materialistic society; he risked his life
in the war and now he return to a place where everyone just care about themselves. I think the beach
influenced much this idea of Seymour because when we are in the beach we are more carefree than
in other
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Franny And Zooey Character Analysis
J.D. Salinger's novel, Franny and Zooey follows the story of Franny, a college–aged girl in the midst
of an identity crisis, along with her brother, Zooey who is shown criticizing his family and himself
throughout the piece. Both Franny and Zooey's quasi–depression stems from the loss of their
suicidal brother who once taught them about religion and spirituality and is often displayed
throughout the novel through Salinger's creation of characters and complex symbols. The book has
become increasingly popular and relatable as it highlights themes of mental illness and loss of
innocence in a young adult. Salinger's overall message is relevant and relatable today to the
audience as the characters overcome their egotistical peers, societal expectations and mourning of a
loved one. Salinger's development of Franny's character within the novel reveals her underlying
mental illness and current identity crisis, primarily by comparing the protagonists Lane and Franny.
In the first part of the novel, Salinger foreshadows the character's personalities as he reveals their
first and last names, Franny Glass and Lane Coutell. The last name Glass clearly indicates Franny's
future mental breakdown while previewing the audience of her fragile character. The last name
Coutell, according to name origin databases, suggests personality characteristics such as high
authority and sharp instincts. Salinger himself displays this within the novel as he notes how Lane
dominates Franny in a somewhat
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The Homeless Family In The Glass Castle
"Blood makes you related, loyalty makes you family" – Chris Diaz. The Glass Castle is a book
about a homeless family. The family faced many troubles throughout their lives. The book is about
memories of Jeannette and her family. The Walls family faced many struggles and those struggles
brought the family together. They all learned to work together and support each other no matter the
circumstances. *When a family faces a difficult situation it brings them together not tear them
apart.*
The Walls children had a good connection, although Maureen was mostly the one out of the four
children to be selfish and would look out for only herself, not her siblings. There was one scene in
The Glass Castle where Jeannette was in bed sleeping and a man was touching her inappropriately.
She got her younger brother Brian to help her chase down the man as Jeannette says, "Dad was out
that night, and when Mom slept she was dead to the world, so Brian and I ran after the man
ourselves" (Walls 103). Since she didn't have anyone else to help her chase down the man she asked
Brian. This shows that they stood together because nobody else was going to help catch the man.
Although, further in the book her father Rex does help her younger brother Brian go "pervert
hunting" but they do not find the man. Instead of sleeping with the ... Show more content on
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Erma wasn't an ideal grandmother, she was always in a grumpy mood. She would tend to yell at The
Walls children for the most simplest reasons. One day, Jeannette notices that Erma is touching Brian
inappropriately. Jeannette runs to Brian and Erma and tells her to leave him alone. Erma gets
aggressive with Jeannette, "Erma reached over to slap me but Lori caught her hand. 'Let's all simmer
down,' Lori said" (Walls 147). Jeannette could have not done anything about the situation and let
Erma continue, but Jeannette defended Brian just as Brian would defend
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Simple Family Roles In Jeannette Walls The Glass Castle
A simple family setup consists of a mother, a father, and a child–– or in some cases children. Each
member is given a role and is usually required to fill that role for at least the first eighteen years of
each child's life, so if the family were to have two children two years apart, the parents are to be
apart of the children's lives for the next 20 years. The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls focuses on a
family who center their lives around the moment and often breaks the systematic roles other
families may have. The family goes through tests of their endurance, but just barely make it through.
The two figureheads of the household are more like adolescents and are too busy fighting with each
other rather focusing on their children making it rather difficult ... Show more content on
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As the kids grow up they notice many irregularities in the parents relationship and are often forced
to intervene. Once Rose Mary steps up and gets a job teaching she knows Rex will only spend the
money on alcohol or gambling and decides to have Jeanette hide it (48). Though the plan fails due to
Rex's deceitful nature, by bringing the kids into the middle of what should be adult affairs, the
parents are failing to raise the kids, and instead are having the kids raise them. The strong distrust
Rose Mary has for her husband is an extremely wrong example to set for her children. For instance,
one time when Rex came home Rose Mary was so scared she hid in the bathtub with a knife out of a
fear she has of her husband. The end result is one that is most likely unfathomable in a conventional
family setting, "Dad started laughing and hugging Mom, who was laughing and hugging him. It was
as if they were so happy they hadn't killed each other that they had fallen in love all over again"
(78). The display the two put on was beyond dysfunctional because from start to finish as neither
intentions are loving, but rather fearful
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The Theme Of Childhood In The NovelFranny And Zooey
Though not much is known about J.D. Salinger's childhood or family, a plethora of his works
include overall themes of family and how different aspects of childhood can affect someone in the
future (Wenke). In his novel, Franny and Zooey, this theme is an important part of the story
(French). The story begins with Franny Glass' story, told in third person by an unknown narrator.
She's taking a weekend off from college to meet her boyfriend, Lane Coutell, to eat lunch and spend
the weekend with him for his college's football weekend. At lunch, Franny has a mental breakdown
and tells Lane about how she hates all of the fake people she encounters. She meets many poets and
they all write about what will interest people and not about what they actually feel. She finds beauty
in the things that actually have important value to people rather than something that means nothing.
Lane also questions her on the little green book she always carries around. She avoids the question
until she can't and explains she got it in her college library, which she is obviously lying about. She
proceeds to go to the bathroom and pass out. When she wakes up, Lane can tell something is wrong,
but he no longer questions her. Then it switches to Zooey's story. It is narrated by the second eldest
Glass sibling, Buddy Glass. Zooey and his mother, Bessie, are struggling to get along. She
continuously questions him, and she babies Franny and only speaks of Seymour, his brother who
committed suicide, and
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A Perfect Day For Bananafish Essay
During World War II, the United States was in desperate need of resources, after the events of the
Great Depression. Since men were drafted into the war, unemployment rates dropped and the U.S.
had successfully pulled themselves out of the depression, while also creating a new kind of
materialism. Salinger, the author of "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", sets the mood for the story
immediately. The story opens up with Muriel sitting in her hotel room, painting her nails and fixing
her Saks blouse, the same hotel as some New York advertising salesmen. Later in the story,
Seymour creates an imaginative creature called the Bananafish, who are known to encounter
bananas in a cave and eat so many bananas, that they are unable to fit back out through the hole. Just
as this fake species does, Muriel and the rest of the world will ... Show more content on
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Seymour is sick and his condition that he's dealing with would be defined today as Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder. First of all, any returning soldier is going to go through multiple difficulties, when
handling with reality. Seymour Glass can't deal with how everyone is so wrapped up into
consumption and luxuries, especially after seeing the horrors of war and death. Another example of
the Bananafish theory would be Seymour's struggles with getting himself enveloped into the war.
His experiences caused him a lot of pain and it's difficult to get out of this mental state. In addition
to his PTSD, no one is sympathetic towards Seymour's problems; Muriel and her parents only
believe he's crazy. It's apparent Muriel doesn't care for Seymour when she never spends time with
him, and she forgets where she put the poem book he gave her. This explains why Seymour spends
time with children, such as Sybil and Sharon, because they can't detect his "insanity". He tries his
best to attain his lost innocence, so that he can run away from the tangible
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A Perfect Day For Bananafish Essay
Erin Thickpenny ENG 122 Ruhlmann 27 September 2017 A Perfect Day for Bananafish
Synecdoche Essay What on earth is a bananafish? How does it connect to the real world? In J.D.
Salinger short story Perfect Day for Bananafish we discover what truly is a bananafish and how the
banana fish relates to the common man and their daily struggles. As we get into the story we are
given a brief glimpse into the main character Seymour Glass and what he displays a multiple
different behaviors with different characters. Salinger expresses the use of As the story progresses,
Salinger uses conflict, characterization, and symbolism to demonstrate how a traumatic experience,
like going to war can change a person's perception. As the short story progresses ... Show more
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Seymour has become an outsider in a world that is directed by materialism, gluttonous, and
unimportance , has no real outlet for the complicated emotions he carries around inside him. He has
been damaged psychologically by the war and is clearly not receiving the medical care he needs.
Muriel, along with her family live in a world he can no longer understand, and his behavior in that
world is unsuitable, disturbing, and dangerous. Seymour in the story displays classic signs of Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder "PTSD", and at that time no one knew exactly what PTSD was and back
then it was called shell shock and was at an all time high and "during the early years of World War
II, psychiatric casualties had increased some 300 percent when compared with World War I, even
though the pre–induction psychiatric rejection rate was three to four times higher than World War I.
At one point in the war, the number of men being discharged from the service for psychiatric
reasons exceeded the total number of men being newly drafted."("The Evolution of Post–Traumatic
Stress Disorder!" 2012) Seymour is sadly a prime example of an undiagnosed case and as the story
displays his obvious symptoms
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The Glass Castle Jeanette Walls Family Struggles
Throughout life, many people face struggles of trying to make it, and Jeanette Walls' family has
experienced many of the life struggles, including homelessness, hunger, and unemployment by
trying to get by. There are many instances in The Glass Castle that show Jeanette's life and her
family's struggle over the course of her growing up. The Walls family struggles bring a positive
outlook on life with a creative and lucky turn with each event. Many times in the book, the Walls
struggle to make ends meet. Jeanette talks about the many creative ways that their parents tried to
make things better, but many times the children would go hungry. The kids would sleep in
cardboard boxes as beds, and they did this because their parents made it sound ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
For the most part, Rex had a steady job, and Rosemary still had a majority of the money from her
inheritance. The family had regular meals, and the children were enrolled in a school that praised
them for their giftedness (95), but soon Lori began to fall short by struggling with seeing. The
school began to send notes saying that she needed glasses, but Rosemary insisted that, "glasses were
crutches" and "if you had weak eyes, you needed exercise to make them strong" (96). The house
was a grand old house that brought many things to the family. When the family pulled up to the
house, Jeanette writes, "we were definitely moving up in the world" (94). Once Rex got fired from
his job, the bills began to pile up, and they started by using a hand washing–machine, airing the
house out by night, but the house began to give. Termites had taken the house and ate away at the
floor. Rex's way to fixing the problem was to take beer cans and smashing them into the holes of the
floor. It was a creative and fun way for the kids to help around the house. Jeanette said that the floor
began to look like Swiss cheese. When in Welsh, the family had virtually nothing, and would save
money by never using heat, never using electricity, and never stepping foot in the kitchen because
the electrical work in there was dangerous. Every night the children would cuddle together because
the nights in Welsh were very cold. They would never complain because they knew that this was
they way to make ends meet for the struggling
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Analysis Of J. D. Salinger's A Perfect Day For Bananafish
War can change people to the point of suicide, which is what Seymour has felt in his life after the
war. J.D. Salinger wrote a story called "A perfect day for Bananafish". This story is about a man that
was a veteran in WWII, who has acquired a few mental problems because of it. When he meets a
little girl named Sybil, and they go into the ocean together. They see these fish that eat bananas until
they get too fat to get out of their hole and die. When he goes back to the hotel, by the elevator a he
accuses a woman for looking at his feet. Then he goes to his room and shoots himself through his
right temple. I believe that the the theme of the story is guilt, and the author shows that by showing
Seymour kissing Sybil's foot then killing himself after a woman looks at his own. The author uses
setting in the story like its paradise. A beautiful resort on the beach in Florida of 1948. Seymour is
basically all alone and his only friend is al little girl named Sybil. Sybil enforces the setting by being
this perfect little girl playing on the beach. The water is home to bananafish that Sybil shows
Seymour. Which also enforces the setting of a happy, beautiful place. ... Show more content on
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He has mental problems that have been created from his experience of World War Two. Seymour
has attempted to commit suicide 2 times already, one by crashing a car into a tree, then trying to
jump out of a window. The only way to pass the time in florida for him is to go to the beach and
have fun with the children. He meets the secondary character named sybil. Sybil is a sweet little girl
that loves playing with Seymour. Seymour doesn't change too much throughout the story, he has
always loved playing with children and attempting suicide. Only this time he successfully commits
suicide by shooting himself in the head. Sybil is not dynamic because she only shows the same
personality throughout the
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A Family on the Move in The Glass Castle by Jeannette Wals
The Glass Castle is about a very poor family that constantly moves from place to place just to
seemingly stay alive. The book addresses the many social issues that we deal with every day. One of
the most important social issues disputed on a daily basis are the kind of parents we want to be and
what we want to teach our children for their future. In this memoir we are able to see how Rex and
Rosemary Walls teach their children the values of everyday life. The parents try to teach their
children that whatever life throws at you, you can handle it with resilience. The parents
accomplished the goals for their children by telling them that they loved them and to never give up.
The Walls children gained exceptional values that may not have been learned had these children
grown up with different parents. Both parents in the Glass Castle ultimately help Jeannette and the
rest of her family become the people they are today, and would not have been able to accomplish
this without the parents. Jeannette Walls is the main character in the Glass Castle. She begins to
have faith in her father that he will keep his promises. Early in the memoir her father teaches her a
life lesson to always face your fears no matter how tough they may seem. In his words "... but you
can't cling to the side your whole life, that one lesson every parent needs to teach a child is 'If you
don't want to sink, you better figure out how to swim..." (66).
In this part of
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The Glass Castle Jeanette Walls Family Struggles
Throughout life, many people face struggles of trying to make it, and Jeanette Walls' family has
experienced many of the life struggles, including homelessness, hunger, and unemployment by
trying to get by. There are many instances in The Glass Castle that show Jeanette's life and her
family's struggle over the course of her growing up. The Walls family struggles bring a positive
outlook on life with a creative and lucky turn with each event. Many times in the book, the Walls
struggle to make ends meet. Jeanette talks about the many creative ways that their parents tried to
make things better, but many times the children would go hungry. The kids would sleep in
cardboard boxes as beds, and they did this because their parents made it sound ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
For the most part, Rex had a steady job, and Rosemary still had a majority of the money from her
inheritance. The family had regular meals, and the children were enrolled in a school that praised
them for their giftedness (95), but soon Lori began to fall short by struggling with seeing. The
school began to send notes saying that she needed glasses, but Rosemary insisted that, "glasses were
crutches" and "if you had weak eyes, you needed exercise to make them strong" (96). The house
was a grand old house that brought many things to the family. When the family pulled up to the
house, Jeanette writes, "we were definitely moving up in the world" (94). Once Rex got fired from
his job, the bills began to pile up, and they started by using a hand washing–machine, airing the
house out by night, but the house began to give. Termites had taken the house and ate away at the
floor. Rex's way to fixing the problem was to take beer cans and smashing them into the holes of the
floor. It was a creative and fun way for the kids to help around the house. Jeanette said that the floor
began to look like Swiss cheese. When in Welsh, the family had virtually nothing, and would save
money by never using heat, never using electricity, and never stepping foot in the kitchen because
the electrical work in there was dangerous. Every night the children would cuddle together because
the nights in Welsh were very cold. They would never complain because they knew that this was
they way to make ends meet for the struggling
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Dewey's Idea Of Family In The Green Glass Sea Book
Have you ever wanted to learn the deeper meaning of the Green Glass Sea book, well know you can
with new Glasses, just kidding, but we can teach you about how Deweys Idea of family has
Changed throughout this novel. For example, Dewey's ideas of family's leaving, family's that care
for you, and the idea that a family keens into your Situation
One idea of family that has changed for Dewey is that your family won't leave you. For example, in
chapter "For the Duration", Dewey learns that her father had died. Also, before that, in the Chapter
"Morganville", we learn that before Dewey came to the Hill, she was alone with aunt for 2 months
while Morgansville was being built. Because of this, we can see that she most likely had the idea
that family always left, and never stayed to care for her. This was changed after Dewey mistakenly
thought that Suze's family was leaving the hill without Dewey, but Suze later proves her wrong.
This means that her family won't leave her, because Suzes family didn't, and it seems as though this
is when she realizes that family ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
For example, in the chapter "Traveling", it says, "Mrs. Kovack, who has been doing her good
Christian duty by taking Dewey in. Or so she tells Dewey every time she gets". This means that she
doesn't really care about Dewey because she only cares because she needs to. Also, Dewey's Nana
was probably a friend with Kovack to because they are neighbors so this would mean that she only
did this because of her friendship, not care. This was changed when Dewey mistakenly thinks that
Suzes family is leaving the hill without her, but Suze promptly corrects Dewey. This means that
Suze cared for her because she had to our of the way to help Dewey, which she didn't need to, so
that signifies caring. All in all, the idea that family cares for you have only been with Suze for the
end parts of the book when she was under the care of the
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My Family History In The Glass Castle By Jeanette Walls
Unlike The Glass Castle, author Jeanette Walls, it is not difficult for me to talk about my family
history. It is easy for me simply because I was lucky enough and never experienced the hardships
that Jeannette and her family went through. My full name is Ana Torres and I was born on October
21, 2000. I was born in Manila, Philippines but migrated to San Diego, California at a young age of
7. I am the youngest out of three kids. I have an older brother named Miguel who is 23 years old
this year. He joined the Navy and is currently in Virginia. He wears glasses, has short hair, and likes
to dress up like a hype–beast. He is also stubby, hard–headed, and likes to pull pranks. Lastly, I have
an older sister named Camille who is currently 21 years old. She joined the Air Force after college
and is currently stationed in Germany. She is also super short just like my brother and I. My parents
are Beth and Joel Torres. Both of them are Filipino however, my mom mentioned that we have some
east– Asian blood in us, most likely Chinese or Japanese due to the many countries that conquered
the Philippines. My mom and dad met through a mutual friend and at first my mom said that she
actually disliked my dad but soon grew fond of him. They then got married in 1994, the same year
they had my brother. My mom looks like a typical Asian mom with short, curly hair. She likes to
lecture a lot about life and is super over–protective. My dad on the other hand also looks like a
typical Asian dad.
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Salinger's Franny and Zoey Essay
Salinger's Franny and Zoey
It is the consensus of most critics that Seymour Glass is the most important character and the leader
of the Glass family. This is a point that is obvious from the stories that Salinger has written about
the Glass family. Seymour is looked up to and revered by all the children in the family and is his
mothers "favorite, most intricately calibrated, her kindest son"(Franny 89). When catastrophe strikes
in Franny and Zooey, the only person Franny wants to talk to is Seymour. Why is Seymour the most
important person in the Glass family?
Seymour is the eldest child. Therefore, all will come after him. In a sense, nothing new can be done
after Seymour has done it. All that is left is to imitate and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Also, Buddy is a leader because he is naturally responsible and does what he is told. The main
difference between the children's reactions to the two is that of an equal versus a parent. Buddy
sounds like a parent but Seymour sounds like an equal.
Seymour is also the resident problem solver. We see the evidence of this in Seymour when Buddy
tells a story about his younger brother Waker. It was late on the night of Walt and Waker's birthday
when Seymour and Buddy came upon a fight in the living room. Apparently the young Waker had
given away his new birthday present to a boy in the park. His parents were incensed that Waker had
given it away just because the boy had asked for it. When it becomes clear that the argument will
not be solved in this way, Seymour steps in and Buddy says "... and I knew, from experience, that
peace in our living room was about to be restored, however miraculously"(240).
The final reason why Seymour is considered the main character of the Glass family narrative is that
he continues to leave his mark on his family. As the eldest child Seymour has affected everyone in
his family. His suicide is their greatest tragedy. In Franny and Zooey, we clearly see the evidence.
Throughout the bathroom scene between Zooey and Bessie, we see much of the effects of
Seymour's suicide on his mother. "She was wearing her usual at–home vesture–– what her son
Buddy... called
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The Influence Of The Walls Family In The Glass Castle
In the memoir, The Glass Castle, the Walls family are known for not living in one place for an
extremely long time. Just a few places that the Walls family lived were: Phoenix, Las Vegas, San
Francisco, Midland, Blythe and Battle Mountain. Jeannette Walls, the author, was most influenced
by her time living in Battle Mountain. This is shown by the numerous experiences that she had with
her family which changed who she was as a person and eventually formed her into the person and
author she is today.
Battle Mountain, Nevada was one location that the Walls family had decided to live in while moving
from city to city and state to state. Battle Mountain was also one of the cities that the Walls family
stayed to live in for the longest. One experience that Jeanette had in Battle Mountain was the
scenery that it had, she loved going to the desert. Jeanette tells from the book, "The thing we liked
to do most was go exploring in the desert...Dad could tell what kind of minerals and ore were in the
ground from the color of the rock and soil, and they taught us what to look for"(55). During this part
of the book the Walls Family had recently arrived in Battle Mountain and the children were not in
school yet. But Rex and Rose ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Dad lost his job,"(67) Lori informed Jeanette. Which was not a surprise, but it was the job that he
had for the longest period of time. Because Rex lost his job and the family had no real source of
income the Walls were left with crumbs to eat. But Mary Rose could not let her family live a life of
constant worrying about food, so she gets herself a job. A job as a teacher at the school which Lori,
Jeanette and Brian attend. This is the first time that Mary Rose has a job and it shows Jeanette as
well as the other children that women are also allowed to have jobs and make money. That men are
not the only ones who are allowed to
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Pride In J. D. Salinger's Franny And Zooey
In J.D Salinger's Franny and Zooey, the theme of pride is heavily explored and is essential to the
personality and development of the main characters. This is done through recounting the
experiences of members of the Glass family, a household of intellectuals who never seem to be
satisfied with their present state of being. A former star on the radio show "It's a Wise Child", the
eldest sibling, Seymour, who committed suicide later in his lifetime, felt it his duty to act as a
religious guide to his younger siblings and instills in them the values of Buddhism– a factor which
later contributed to much dissatisfaction amongst his younger brother and sister. Moreover, Salinger
stresses the excessive pride of Franny, who views her contemporaries as inferior, and the resultant
detriment of such a temperament. Zooey's egotistic nature is likewise explored, along with the
negative impact of his disillusionment with his education and those around him. When she is first
introduce, Franny, one of the titular characters, faces ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Also like Franny, he feels badly about himself for doing so. Zooey, moreover, averts any blame as to
why he turned out the way he did onto his brothers and the education he received from them. His
abhorrence of his brothers manifests itself to such an extent that, says Zooey, he "could murder them
both without even batting an eyelash." Zooey complains that his preachness and borderdom– a
result of the way in which he was raised by his brothers– prevents him from even sitting down and
maintaining a conversation with others. Likewise, he is discontent with the fact that he was a
celebrity as a child– an additional factor on which he blames his persona. As is evident from his
conversation with his mother, the impact of being "Wise Children" prevented him from conversing
with others and, by extension, interacting properly in
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The Glass Castle Family Issues
For my book report project I choose to read a memoir by Jeannette Walls titled The Glass Castle.
This book takes the reader through the painful years of Jeannette's childhood while she and her three
siblings struggle to survive due to their irresponsible and self–centered parents. At the beginning of
the book, the family was living in California moving frequently from town to town. Jeannette's
father, Rex was a major alcoholic. Because of his alcoholism, he found it very hard to maintain a
job. He would become violent in fits of rage, sometimes injuring his own wife and children. The
family had to be particularly cautious in what they did or said as to not set him off or avoid beatings.
They would "skedaddle" or spontaneously relocate ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The main problems being alcoholism, child abuse, and poverty. These three key concerns are
completely intertwined with each other. Jeannette's fathers' alcoholism stems from possibly being
sexually abused by his own mother during childhood. As he attempts to drown his sorrows, he in
tern neglects his children. This is particularly important because when they went to live with the
grandma, she started to sexually abuse Brian, Jeannette's younger brother. Rex could have possibly
prevented this had he been more involved in their lives and less concerned about getting drunk.
Rex's severe alcoholism causes him to be extremely irresponsible and reckless. He is unable and
unwilling to keep a job long enough for the family to settle anywhere. Although Rex does physically
and mentally abuse his family, he is also loving toward them in a very tough and "behind–the–
scene" type of way. The living conditions of the family during this time were horrendous. They
often found food and clothes from dumpsters. Jeannette's hair was never brushed because her
mother said it was the kids responsibility to take care of themselves. While living at the
grandmothers house in West Virginia, the kids were allowed one bath a week. They were given four
inches of water and all four kids shared the same bath water. Because the parents did not want to
pay to have their trash collected, they decided to trick the kids into digging a hole in the yard. The
shack they moved into after leaving the grandmothers house had a big hole in the ceiling so when it
would rain outside, it would also rain into their kitchen. Rex and Rose Mary refused to apply for
welfare or food stamps because they "didn't accept handouts" from anyone. They were completely
on their own and so were their children. Other kids would make fun of the Walls children because
they dressed in rags, lived without electricity and didn't have food to eat.
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The Glass Castle : Family Values, Information About Social...
Describe Jeannette's childhood, specifically her socialization or the process by which she acquired
family values, information about social expectations, and survival strategies. This is a summary on
the Glass Castle is about a young woman name Jeannette begins to look back of the pasts on her
childhood and how her parents' choices affected her and her siblings. When Jeannette was three–
year–old, she was boils her own hotdogs and got burned horribly that she went to the hospital. After
few days, her father got her out of bed and left the hospital without paying the bill. The most
memories about the Walls of her childhood focus in the desert and how the family move to different
desert towns to settling in as long as their father can hold a job. He has such paranoia about the state
and society and he also have dealt with his alcoholism that has leads them to move often. They used
to settle in small mining town, Battle Mountain, and Nevada while Jeannette and her young brother
Brian spend their time exploring the desert. Their mother is an artist and takes a break from it to
hold down a job as a teacher to extend their stay.
But however, a law enforcement has compels the family to leave and move to Phoenix where
mother has inherited a house from her grandmother. In Phoenix, it offers the family stability like
mother's house is very large and the children can enrolled in school and father have a job to keep
steady of electrician jobs for a while. Jeannette feel so annoy when
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Day For Bananafish
A Perfect Day for Bananafish takes place at a hotel resort in Florida. The story begins with Muriel
Glass, a young woman who has been married to Seymour for five years. Muriel is on the phone with
her mom. Muriel's mother worries that something is wrong with Seymour, and that her daughter is
no longer safe with him. Since his return from World War Two, he has been acting unusual. He
seems to be incapable to function in social places as he tends to isolate himself from other adults.
The story then takes place at the beach outside of the hotel. There, a little girl around the age of four
years old is waiting for her mother to finish applying sunscreen to her back. Sybil kept repeating
"See more glass" to which her mother could not understand the meaning. ... Show more content on
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Throughout their time staying at the hotel, Sybil and Seymour have developed a friendship. The two
head into the ocean together where Seymour explains "bananafish" to Sybil. Seymour states they are
"very ordinary–looking fish" that swim into a hole where there are a lot of bananas. Once in the hole
the fish feast on as many bananas as they can eat. After they eat so much "they're so fat they can't
get out of the hole again". Since they cannot fit back through the hole they entered, the bananafish
end up dying there. Sybil believes Seymour's story and therefore exclaims that she saw a bananafish
with six bananas in its mouth. Seymour then kissed the arch of Sybil's foot and returned her back to
the beach. After the two went their own ways, Seymour made his way back to the hotel. In the
elevator he accuses a woman of staring at his feet. Seymour makes it back to his room where he
opens the door to find Muriel asleep on one of the twin beds. He took a gun out of his suitcase, sat
on the other twin bed, looked at Muriel for one last time, the fired a bullet through his right
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The Walls Family In The Glass Castle
After reading The Glass Castle, I felt I could relate to the Walls family in some ways. Although
there is no question her childhood was much worse than mine; I have been through my fair share of
challenges. Overcoming various struggles throughout my childhood made me the person I am today.
Like Jeannette, our fathers are similar to a certain caliber. Like Rex, my father used to drink
frequently. Of course I never knew that because I was just an oblivious child. Even though he drank
I never suspected it, for he was always very nice to me and took care of me before himself. I could
never distinguish his personality from drunk to sober; he behaved the same. Another parallel
between Rex and my dad, Jeff, both men never made the wisest choices. He married five women
and has one or more children with three of them. Even though my dad made poor choices, he is
undeniably a great guy. Just like in The Glass Castle, alcoholism, and specific family dynamics have
affected my family and me in multiple ways. My father has seven children including me. The boys
are Joseph, Justin, Jonathan, and me, Javen. Ironically they are all names that start with the letter J.
My sisters from him are Malinda, Shandell, and Cicily. Malinda and I are the closest out of all the
others. I only consider ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He informed me that we were making another trip to Portsmouth to help them move into our house.
I was so pissed at him I didn't talk the entire trip; which was close to four hours long. It took two
days to get all of their stuff around and packed into the Uhaul. Tammy put all the burnable stuff in
trash bags. She sent my dad to burn it all. She failed to mention that she put live .22 rounds in one of
the trash bags. There was a loud bang and one fired off and hit my dad in the shin. It left a nice hole
in his leg. From that moment on I knew, she was a halfwit. When we got back to Carey I went
straight to my room and didn't help them unpack
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Dysfunctional Family In The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls
The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls is a memoir about her life growing up with her dysfunctional
family. Jeannette and her siblings in poverty and were very independent due to their parents. The
Glass Castle should be a required summer reading for the class of 2019. The story gives reader a
chance to view the world in a different meaningful perspective of a poor happy child. It also helps
guide readers with meaningful advice. Through her youth, Jeannette faced many hardships due to
her negligent parents. Even so she always had an sanguine outlook on life. Jeannette fell out of a
moving car and was abandoned. Her father didn't even notice until hours after. Instead of being
shocked or terrified of the situation, she laughs it off. "I started
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A Tree Grows In Brooklyn Analysis
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn How did Francie mature as time progressed throughout the early years of
her life? When Francie grew up and had to help support and keep the family together, she gained an
early peek of maturity and womanhood. She then gained the privilege to be independent and earn
the title of assistance. Meanwhile, as time passed she lost her father, Johnny Nolan, and had to earn
income to keep the family afloat to continue to progress despite the hardship and heartbreaking
sacrifices that lies ahead. From a little girl to a young woman, Francie learned to do things a lot
earlier to help support and keep her family together with the power of gaining and losing at the same
time. "Everyone said it was a pity that a slight pretty woman
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Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye and Franny and Zooey
Director Robert Zemeckis once stated, "We don't function well as human beings when we're in
isolation." This quotation pertains to the protagonists in both The Catcher in the Rye and Franny and
Zooey by J. D. Salinger. Both protagonists overcome estrangement when they learn from their
siblings the underlying reason behind their feelings of isolation. In The Catcher in the Rye, Holden
Caulfield fails to form a connection with others at Pencey Prep and escapes to New York City in an
attempt to overcome his alienation. Similarly, in Franny and Zooey, Franny Glass seeks religion to
cope with her social isolation at college. Initially, both characters are isolated from their peers
because their judgmental attitudes make them unable to form a ... Show more content on
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As each novel progresses, both protagonists seek instant pleasure in attempt to escape from their
isolation, but their desperation for comfort leads to their deteriorating health. Holden attempts to
escape his feelings of alienation by going to New York City, but in his desperate attempt to connect
with others, his overall health worsens. Struggling with his loneliness, he reluctantly agrees to have
a prostitute come to his room at the hotel: "I was feeling so depressed I didn't even think" (Catcher
91). Holden's desperation has made him travel from Pencey Prep, in Pennsylvania, all the way to
New York City to escape his feeling of isolation from his fellow students. Even though it goes
against his moral values about sex, he desperately reaches out to anyone who might be willing to
ease his loneliness, and that leads him to accept the offer of letting a prostitute come to his hotel.
Although once she arrives, he feels insecure and refuses to have sex. The prostitute is a symbol of
instant gratification that Holden initially thought he wanted to comfort his isolation, but ends up
feeling too insecure to have sex because the prospect that his first sexual experience would be with a
prostitute depresses him. When Holden refuses to pay the extra charge that the prostitute requests,
she gets annoyed and calls her "boss," Maurice. Eventually, this situation results in Holden being
assaulted. After this beating, Holden feels like he is at his
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J.D. Salinger's A Perfect Day for Ortgies Essay
J.D. Salinger's A Perfect Day for Bananafish
At first glance, J.D. Salinger's short story 'A Perfect Day for Bananafish' is the story of a
psychically–torn war veteran whose post–traumatic stress moves him to take his own life while on a
second honeymoon with his wife. Indeed, that is the story, but that first glance does not reveal the
inner motives and symbolic pathways Seymour Glass takes to reach the final decision to end his
life. The carefully placed details and minute innuendoes are deliberate on Salinger's part, and they
represent pieces of the puzzle to find out what is really happening in the protagonist's head. Indeed,
'A Perfect Day' is just one part of the Glass family saga, and Seymour's character and family ...
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Now, if instead of ?See More? Glass we define him as ?See More Glass? then I have a slightly more
cryptic interpretation for his name. Now, the Glass family is Jewish, as is established in Salinger?s
Nine Stories, and Seymour is a veteran of World War II. Before America?s involvement in the war,
on November 9th, 1938, there was a very violent uprising of Reich citizens against the Jewish
population orchestrated by Joseph Goebbels. During that time thousands Jewish citizens were
rounded up for concentration camps and their businesses were destroyed, littering the streets with
glass from their storefronts. That night came to be known as the Kristallnacht, or in English, the ?
Night of Broken Glass.? Though I know there is no direct link to this night in the story, and indeed it
took place before Seymour was even in Europe, it has a direct link to the first major violence against
Jews as well as a sharp spike in the number of Jewish adults who committed suicide to escape the
horrors of the Reich. The perhaps far–fetched, I feel this more esoteric interpretation of Seymour?s
name could well represent the link to the horrors he experienced during his tenure in World War II.
A name is a metaphysical representation of a person, but there are physical hints in Seymour?s
characterization that hint towards a greater purpose in his actions. Muriel tells her mother that he
wears his bathrobe on the beach so that people won?t see his
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Franny And Zooey Essay
In the novel, Franny and Zooey by J.D Salinger, it is overwhelmed with many themes; the novel
also reveals an important message on finding ones self and dealing with the difficulties and
struggles of life; these themes consist of religion, egos, and culture. Franny Glass struggles with the
phoniness and egotism that spreads through society. She longs to escape her problems and decides
to get away from it by withdrawing into spirituality religious values through the Jesus Prayer. She
soon realizes the down fall of her solution and through her pains and challenges; she learns how to
deal with social unpleasantness. Franny learns that she needs to shed her egotism and act
unselfishly. The novel also has many different symbols with ... Show more content on
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The novel also has very much to do with Buddhist thoughts, mostly about the idea of "no–
knowledge." To achieve wisdom, the Buddhist must clear his head of any negative thoughts or
distractions. This process is totally opposite to Western education, the education that Franny and
Zooey live in, which is mentioned a lot of times in the book and stuffs its students with knowledge.
Franny criticizes that the poets at her school does not describe anything beautiful in their work, but
only get into her head. She is disappointed in herself, as well, for trying to save wisdom through the
Jesus Prayer as others save knowledge. But what she does not know is that true "no–knowledge"
cannot be saved. In the beginning of the book, it shows that Franny's boyfriend, Lane, has the
biggest ego in the book. The course to Buddhist "no–knowledge" is very difficult to do. The person
would have to let go of their personal ego and selfish concerns to reach open minded beauty. Franny
dislikes her professors at her school because they are absorbed in their own egos, and whatever
detachment they have is and detachment from humanity. Buddhists try to get rid of their negativity
ego and gain up the positive part of the ego. Zooey tells Franny she has to act, as that is her God–
given talent, and use her ego as best she can. Franny cannot let the negative part of her ego interfere
by making her criticize the other actors. Instead, she must focus
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Day For Bananafish
In "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," J. D. Salinger weaves an innocent enough story that goes wildly
astray at the end. Throughout the bulk of the work, Salinger details disinterested and awkward
conversations between various parties interspersed with an air of caution. The story culminates with
a surprising act of suicide by Seymour Glass, the character throughout which most of the story
centers. This abrupt ending is written in such a manner that the reader must immediately reflect
upon the rest of the story in order to understand the reasons behind this action. As a whole,
Salinger's short story involves a recounting of important themes from American society in the post–
World War II era. These themes include post–traumatic stress for returning ... Show more content on
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Materialism can be seen throughout the story. The setting at a vacation resort in Florida is the first
sign. In the opening line, the recounting that the hotel is occupied primarily by advertising men
provides a further indication of the material nature of society. This is also relevant in the phone
conversation between Muriel and her mother. Throughout the conversation, the reader is exposed to
a situation most notably characterized by faulty communication with each participant in the
conversation failing to connect with the other's point of view. The one exception to this is the topic
of fashion as it becomes quite relevant that both Muriel and her mother are strongly influenced by
these material things. Muriel particularly discusses the disdainful way that the wife of an associate
wears a green dress (Dermot 2). It appears that the topics most important to these individuals are
quite superficial in nature. Perhaps the most significant aspect of the story in relation to materialism
is the analogy of the bananafish itself. Seymour explains to Sybil that bananafish swim around
looking for holes. When they find a hole, they swim in and eat all the bananas in the hole, becoming
so engorged that they are unable to fit back out. Sadly, this causes the death of the bananafish. This
story undoubtedly serves as foreshadowing to
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Perfect Day For Bananafish
At the end of "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," Seymour Glass commits suicide while on vacation in
Florida with his wife, Muriel, by shooting himself in the head while Muriel sleeps on the twin bed
next to him. It seems like a crazy thing to do. People would say that only someone with severe
mental problems does something like that. Seymour is a military veteran, a poet, a "Wise Child,"
and an extremely complicated man. A number of J.D. Salinger's writings reveal pieces of Seymour's
character, including "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," "Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters,"
Franny and Zooey," and "Seymour – an Introduction," which I read, hoping to gain more insight on
why Seymour does what he does.
First of all, it is important to know that the Salinger often writes about the Glass family; two parents
and seven children of which Seymour is the eldest. Buddy is two years younger. All four of the
Salinger pieces that I am focusing on are 'written by' Buddy. Buddy is not physically present in three
out of the four stories – the only one he writes where he is present is "Raise High ... Show more
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The one that stands out to me when trying to gain insight into Seymour's viewpoint is "The
happiness of being with people. –Kafka" (178). This quote is significant on many levels: When
Seymour commits suicide, he Muriel is with him in the room, although on their vacation they spent
very little time together. She, sewing her clothes and painting her nails, and him, on the beach
talking to the little girl, Sybil. Seymour is hesitant to be "with people" on their wedding day, and his
elated unsteadiness seems to be a darker, panicked elation, and he would rather just be happy with
Muriel. There is something about Seymour's constant awareness of happiness that suggests that he is
deeply
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J.D Salinger’s Franny and Zooey Essay
The Pessimistic and Bitter Franny Glass of J.D Salinger's Franny and Zooey
Young adulthood is often a time for maturing spiritually. Franny Glass, the protagonist of J.D
Salinger's novel, Franny and Zooey, began to question her religious beliefs, during this time of
spiritual growth. Franny's quest for religion caused her to become pessimistic, bitter, and
emotionally unstable. Franny held many strong beliefs that caused her to view her surroundings
pessimistically. After spending three years contently in college, Franny changed her view of the
college experience. She decided that college was "one more dopey inane place in the world.';
(Salinger, 146) She failed to see college as a place that allows one to increase his or her ... Show
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Similarly, Franny felt she was "sick of liking people and wished to g–d she would meet somebody
she could respect. Franny's extreme bitterness caused her to feel no respect towards others. As a
result of Franny's problematic religious questions, she viewed her surroundings very bitterly. During
Franny's young adulthood, she underwent a period of emotional instability. She felt as if she was a
patient "in a lunatic asylum'; (Salinger, 192), and her brother, Zooey, was "another patient';
(Salinger, 192) who attempted to treat her. By comparing herself to a patient in an asylum, Franny
acknowledged the fact that she was emotionally unstable. Even though Franny was "losing weight
like mad and worrying Bessie and Les';(Salinger, 149), she still refused to eat or seek help. Although
Zooey constantly advised Franny that she "[didn't] have enough sense to eat, when someone
[brought] her [food]';, Franny was so overwhelmed with her religious quest that she disregarded her
need for food. As a result of Franny's pessimistic views
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Examples Of Family Forgiveness In The Glass Castle By...
Family Forgiveness
[Robert Browning once said "Good to forgive;best to forget."]In book The Glass Castle by Jeannette
Walls there is a poor family that moves from place to place and house to house. The kids are finding
it hard to get use to their environments, and the situation is no better with their drunk dad and selfish
mom. There are a lot of situations where the family argues or fight with each other and other people
they meet along the way,but they end up forgiving each other in the tough situations they go
through.The book shows that *it is good to forgive people but if they keep mess up it's hard to trust
them again.*
When jeannette was younger her family were always in arguments and fights, which would cause
the family to have
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Theme Of The Family And Glass Menagerie
In the novel Angela's Ashes and the play Glass Menagerie, each character confronts many obstacles
that it caused by social standards, the three main suspects of these obstacles are, the mindset of
"breadwinner", Southern values and Irish pride, and the era of the two stories.
The McCourt family is a family consisting of one female and four male personnel, not including the
dead members, and it is depicted in the novel that Frank, the oldest brother, to take the of
"breadwinner" of the family and everyone is dependent on him. The call for Frank to become the
breadwinner was a huge role for him an example of this dependency is during when Angela, the
mother, was sick and wanted to drink lemonades and in response, Frank took initiative and stole
lemonade for his mother, but also stole bread and jam for his likewise helpless brothers. This scene
from the book showcases how Frank was anticipated to accept the role of the Father since the main
cause of income, the Father, has left. Similarly, in Glass Menagerie, Tom is unwillingly forced to
take the role of the "breadwinner". An example of Tom being the Father of the family is, "House,
house! Who pays rent on it, who makes a slave of himself to–" (Pg. 24, Tennessee). The mindset of
the society at the time when this play and novel was produced, is that the male would be the one in
charge of making the money and the females doing house work, this family culture greatly affected
both the protagonist as they are to provide instead of
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Analysis Of The Glass Of The Glass
When all the knowledge in the world fails to bring you happiness in life, where do you turn? In the
case of the Glass Siblings, the answer to this question is spiritual enlightenment. Specifically, they
are interested in Eastern religious philosophies. References to these philosophies – such as Taoism,
Buddhism, and Hinduism – are found throughout the Glass novellas. The beliefs of the various
members of the Glass family are frequently revealed through the children they encounter or observe.
Throughout the Glass stories, small children are portrayed as spiritually advanced, with much to
teach adults. The novella, "Zooey," begins with the youngest male of the Glass family reading a
letter that was written to him by Buddy, his elder brother. Buddy tells Zooey of a chance encounter
that he had with a little girl at the butcher shop. In his conversation with the girl, Buddy discovers
she has two boyfriends. He asks her for their names, to which she replies, "Bobby and Dorothy"
(64). Her reply is what motivates Buddy to write his letter to Zooey. He reminds his younger
brother, "that all legitimate religious study must lead to unlearning the differences, the illusory
differences, between boys and girls, animals and stones, day and night, heat and cold" (67–68). In
Buddy's eyes, the little girl's reply represents this ideology. She doesn't recognize that there is a
difference between Bobby and Dorothy; she just knows that they are her "boyfriends." The butcher
shop anecdote is
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The Dysfunctional Family : The Glass Menagerie, Death Of A...
The dysfunctional family is apparent in many households in today's society, for a dysfunctional
family is described as any condition in which healthy family functioning is interfered (Kansas
State). There are many reasons for why families become dysfunctional in America today, and
statistics are staggering, showing that about half of all marriages end in divorce. Dysfunctional
families can be caused either by parents who are insufficient in their efforts to raise their children, or
it can be the children who misbehave and cause ruckus in the household. While healthy families
tend to return to their normal lives after a time of intense stress or crisis, dysfunctional families
experience chronic or longing problems that never seem to fade (Kansas State). The dysfunctional
family is a theme that has been used in many plays and novels in literary history, such as The Glass
Menagerie, Death of a Salesman, and Ordinary People. Like real life, there are causes to why the
families in these works became dysfunctional, and there are distinct characteristics and qualities of
each. The Jarretts, Wingfields, and Lomans, fall victim to the plague of an unhealthy, dysfunctional
household, and there are causes, characteristics, and even cures of this burden. A dysfunctional
family can be caused by deficient and inferior parents who lack basic care taking skills that are
needed to raise a healthy and functional family. These kinds of parents tend to teach their children
the wrong
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The Glass Menagerie Dysfunctional Family Essay
The Dysfunctional Family
In the play "The Glass Menagerie" by Tennessee Williams, Tom had a plan all of his own to quite
his job, and go off and join the merchant marines. Tom hated his job and he felt the pressure of
keeping up the family finances, as well as keeping up his sister and mother. Amanda, Toms mother
appeared to want to control the family, and often told stories of her past growing up in the
Mississippi delta. She claimed she had numerous gentlemen suitors, for example Amanda: "One
Sunday afternoon in Blue Mountain–your mother received–seventeen`! –Gentlemen callers!"(1384
s.c 1) His sister Laura the very opposite of his mother, very shy and reserved, and suffered from
anxiety anytime she was around people and even out of her own home. She got to the point she
dropped out of business school and lingered around the city by day. Laura: "I couldn't go back there.
I–threw up–on the floor!" (1387 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Amanda would find the smallest things to argue with him about. Whether it was he needed to comb
his hair, or why he went to the movies so much. It seemed that Tom appeared to not like living in his
home. He would leave every night, and say he was going to go out to the movie. Tom said that this
gave him adventure, because he didn't get to have adventure at the shoe wear house were he worked.
He had to work at the shoe warehouse to support his mother, and his sister Laura. A person could
easily tell by reading this play that Tom did not enjoy working at this warehouse. He always seemed
stressed, and unhappy with life in general. Tom had his own dream of joining the merchant marines,
and didn't plan on telling anyone about it. Tom had the responsibility of taking care of this mother
and his sister financially. Amanda soon figured out Toms plan when she found a letter from the
merchant marines, and confronted Tom with it. She told him with anger to do what he wanted, but
not until his sister Laura was taken care
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Franny And Zooey
The novel Franny and Zooey was a higher–level reading. J.D. Salinger had written it in a unique
fashion. This novel was split into two sections, one section was "Franny" and the other one was
"Zoeey." Within reading Franny and Zooey, it had a lot of impacts on me as a student, reader and
person in general.
Franny and Zooey had an abundance of impacts on me as a student. As a student this novel included
a lot of allusions and vocabulary I did not know. I was forced to learn all the vocabulary I did not
know as well as the allusions because I needed to be able to understand the novel. I learned a lot
from this novel because the allusions and vocabulary within were very intellectual. I enjoyed the
small group discussions of the novel because ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the Glass family, the children are much more gifted and intelligent than the parents. But the
children keep reminding each other that their parents must be loved and respected for everything
they are and everything they have given their children. Even beyond love, family itself is a crucial
theme in these stories. Zooey tells Franny that they have become "freaks" because their brothers
taught them too much too young. But what their brothers taught also helps Franny out of her
spiritual crisis in the end of the "Zooey" section. Through Seymour's lessons and Zooey's
impression of Buddy's voice, Zooey channels enough support to talk Franny out of her
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A Family Of Flames In The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls
A Family of Flames Michelle K. once explained, "some women are lost in the fire; some women are
built from it". In Jeannette Walls memoir, The Glass Castle, she tells her long, adventurous story
about growing up in a poor family who lived on the road for a majority of her childhood. Fire seems
to be the only constant thing in her life, destroying but also building Jeannette as it grows. After
Jeannette learns to control the fire that consumes her life, she obtains her own flame. Fire begins
spreading through Jeannette's life at a young age. It all begins with catching her dress on fire while
cooking hotdogs at three years old. When taken to the hospital, she is admitted with severe burns
and is instructed to stay in the hospital. When her father Rex believes she has had a long enough
stay in the hospital, Jeannette is checked ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Excited by her find she locks herself in the bathroom and begins to light toilet paper and when the
flame grows bigger, she throws it in the toilet. Jeannette makes the statement, "I was torturing the
fire, giving it life, and snuffing it out" (p. 33). Her father does the same thing to the Walls family
throughout their lives. Rex Walls will support and provide for his family for a period of time and
then allow his job and their money to quickly wither away. As the children age they instantaneously
learn to provide for themselves while away from home. Jeannette starts fending for herself by
digging through the trashcans in the bathrooms during and after lunch. After finding herself food,
she pulls her feet up onto the toilet and eats quietly so no one would catch her. Clearly she learns at
a young age if she wants anything she will have to get it herself. Jeannette and her siblings all lower
the expectations they have of their parents. After Jeannette learns to control the fire that consumes
her life, she obtains her own
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Day For Bananafish
In "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", J.D. Salinger explores the rotting of innocence that comes with
adulthood. The effects of materialism and corruption in human society, especially adults, is a
common theme delivered in Salinger's works. "Critics think of the story as a metaphorical
representation of what happens to sensitive people in a materialistic society filled with people who
are as greedy as the Bananafish about which Seymour tells Sybil" (Shuman). It is being suggested
that Seymour is a sensitive person trapped in a materialistic society and surrounded by people like
Muriel who are as greedy as the Bananafish. Seymour acknowledges his wife's materialism as
Muriel reveals, "He calls me Miss Spiritual Tramp of 1948" (Salinger). Seymour has dubbed his
wife this title because he sees her narcissism and self–obsessive ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Salinger calls the readers to open their eyes to the truth about society. The story acts as a message to
readers warning them of the shallowness and materialism present in the adult world. He believes the
true form of innocence is only feasible in the youth of children. He also plays on the idea that when
people become aware of the social decadence present in the world around them, they can no longer
function properly in society. Salinger suggests that all adults are inevitably tainted by the cruelty
that will ultimately lead to their own demise. This is an important topic to Salinger considering it is
a reoccurring theme in several of his works. His actions in the war may have had a large impression
on the way he views the world and the morality of others. Salinger uses his experiences to write
stories for readers to view the world from his eyes. He wants readers to see society for what it really
is and not be susceptible to the materialism, greed, vanity, and dishonesty that accompany it. Others
should look deeper into their role in society and try to enlighten themselves on what is moral and
what is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Importance Of Family Bond In The Glass Castle By...
Imagine living in a life where everything around you is different from reality. Imagine running from
the police, living wherever one can find, and still taking care of one's family just at the age of 16.
Jeannette Walls had to deal with all of this and more in her early childhood. In the book "The Glass
Castle", the author uses the characters, Jeannette and Rex Walls, to emphasize the importance of
family bonds. Jeannette Walls has always been moving from place to place. Her father, Rex Walls, is
a raging alcoholic who is constantly running from the police in order to keep his kids. They have
lived in houses, their van, even outside. Imagine sleeping outside because the police are looking for
the children of the parents who haven't paid a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Importance Of Family In The Glass Castle By Jeannette...
In, The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls, Walls accounts her family throughout her childhood. To
most people the Walls family would seem very peculiar. They live unbound by other's opinions, and
prefer to stray from normality. The Walls family and the word aberrance define each other, yet, both
have intricacies that go far beyond a simple definition.
Originating in the mid 1500s, aberrant is derived from the verb, aberrare, which means 'to wander
away'. The root of the word, errare, means 'to stray' and the prefix, ab– means 'away from'. Aberrant
is now used as an adjective, with aberrance being used as a noun. The first known use being in
1536, aberrance has since changed from having a negative connotation, to now being used to simply
describe something out of the ordinary. In fact, the usage today is similar to exceptional and
extraordinary, which have very positive inflections. However, the definition or normal or ordinary is
not so clear, which leads to a more complex definition of aberrance. One which, according to the
user, can vary greatly. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This specific family was unusual compared to the rest of society. Rex and Rose Mary Walls, the
parents of this family, have a different way of parenting. For example, Rose Mary states, '"Well,
people in this country are too wasteful. It's my way of recycling'" (Jeannette 5). This demonstrates
how the Walls family does things in a way that stands out of the normal. Rose Mary was digging
through trash, looking for food to eat, although she could have easily found some elsewhere. This is
just one example of being aberrant, as there are numerous examples and situations in which
something or someone can be
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Family Sticks Together In The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls

  • 1. Family Sticks together in The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls The main idea of the book was no matter what happens family stick together. This is the story of Jeannette Walls life told by Jeannette Walls. The title The Glass Castle was a dream the at Rex Walls planned to give the family a mansion in the dessert and call it the glass castle after he found gold. Jeannette's family consisted of Father and Mother, Rex and Rose Mary Walls, and three siblings (Lori, Brian, Maureen). This book starts with Jeannette going to a party in New York. When she spots her mother rummaging through trash cans. Embarrassed, Jeannette goes home changing her mind about going to the party. I guess that was a place to start or a good place to wonder how she got to the point of embarrassment of her parents. The Walls family was always on the move. Rex Walls would depict these sudden moves as "the skedaddle." In all actuality, once paranoia set in or Rex Walls' job ended the family picked up and moved everything. The children had to learn that family stuck together no matter what. The family slept in cars and hotels for majority of the Walls children lives. Jeannette was the favorite of all the Walls children. Spending little time in many different places the Walls children could not rely on making friends. Brain Walls spent time exploring the dessert while on the move. Moving around was what Walls family did a good portion of Jeannette's life. Now the Walls family had moment of stability for a little while. Rose Mary Walls inherited a house from her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Comparing A Protest Against The Sun And A Perfect Day For... The reality and illusion of the beach "A perfect day for Bananafish" by J.D. Salinger and "A Protest Against the Sun" by Steven Millhauser are two different stories that are held in a similar place, the beach. In both stories we have the main characters, Seymour, a retired soldier that felt he didn't belong to the new society, and Elizabeth, a girl that was trying to be closer to her family. They found the beach as the perfect place to find the reality of what was happening and dismissed the illusions of their lives. In the first part of "A perfect day for Bananafish" we have Muriel, Seymour's wife. Seymour was a retired soldier that had psychological issues. She was talking with her mother, who looks to be very concern because of Seymour, but Muriel didn't care, she just wanted to be in the beach with his husband even he is not mentally good. The same happened to Elizabeth, she went to the beach to leave for a while the responsibilities and by the time she was there she realized that the beach was an opportunity to assert her family feelings. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This is the external problem that Seymour was suffering, the materialistic society; he risked his life in the war and now he return to a place where everyone just care about themselves. I think the beach influenced much this idea of Seymour because when we are in the beach we are more carefree than in other ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Franny And Zooey Character Analysis J.D. Salinger's novel, Franny and Zooey follows the story of Franny, a college–aged girl in the midst of an identity crisis, along with her brother, Zooey who is shown criticizing his family and himself throughout the piece. Both Franny and Zooey's quasi–depression stems from the loss of their suicidal brother who once taught them about religion and spirituality and is often displayed throughout the novel through Salinger's creation of characters and complex symbols. The book has become increasingly popular and relatable as it highlights themes of mental illness and loss of innocence in a young adult. Salinger's overall message is relevant and relatable today to the audience as the characters overcome their egotistical peers, societal expectations and mourning of a loved one. Salinger's development of Franny's character within the novel reveals her underlying mental illness and current identity crisis, primarily by comparing the protagonists Lane and Franny. In the first part of the novel, Salinger foreshadows the character's personalities as he reveals their first and last names, Franny Glass and Lane Coutell. The last name Glass clearly indicates Franny's future mental breakdown while previewing the audience of her fragile character. The last name Coutell, according to name origin databases, suggests personality characteristics such as high authority and sharp instincts. Salinger himself displays this within the novel as he notes how Lane dominates Franny in a somewhat ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. The Homeless Family In The Glass Castle "Blood makes you related, loyalty makes you family" – Chris Diaz. The Glass Castle is a book about a homeless family. The family faced many troubles throughout their lives. The book is about memories of Jeannette and her family. The Walls family faced many struggles and those struggles brought the family together. They all learned to work together and support each other no matter the circumstances. *When a family faces a difficult situation it brings them together not tear them apart.* The Walls children had a good connection, although Maureen was mostly the one out of the four children to be selfish and would look out for only herself, not her siblings. There was one scene in The Glass Castle where Jeannette was in bed sleeping and a man was touching her inappropriately. She got her younger brother Brian to help her chase down the man as Jeannette says, "Dad was out that night, and when Mom slept she was dead to the world, so Brian and I ran after the man ourselves" (Walls 103). Since she didn't have anyone else to help her chase down the man she asked Brian. This shows that they stood together because nobody else was going to help catch the man. Although, further in the book her father Rex does help her younger brother Brian go "pervert hunting" but they do not find the man. Instead of sleeping with the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Erma wasn't an ideal grandmother, she was always in a grumpy mood. She would tend to yell at The Walls children for the most simplest reasons. One day, Jeannette notices that Erma is touching Brian inappropriately. Jeannette runs to Brian and Erma and tells her to leave him alone. Erma gets aggressive with Jeannette, "Erma reached over to slap me but Lori caught her hand. 'Let's all simmer down,' Lori said" (Walls 147). Jeannette could have not done anything about the situation and let Erma continue, but Jeannette defended Brian just as Brian would defend ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Simple Family Roles In Jeannette Walls The Glass Castle A simple family setup consists of a mother, a father, and a child–– or in some cases children. Each member is given a role and is usually required to fill that role for at least the first eighteen years of each child's life, so if the family were to have two children two years apart, the parents are to be apart of the children's lives for the next 20 years. The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls focuses on a family who center their lives around the moment and often breaks the systematic roles other families may have. The family goes through tests of their endurance, but just barely make it through. The two figureheads of the household are more like adolescents and are too busy fighting with each other rather focusing on their children making it rather difficult ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As the kids grow up they notice many irregularities in the parents relationship and are often forced to intervene. Once Rose Mary steps up and gets a job teaching she knows Rex will only spend the money on alcohol or gambling and decides to have Jeanette hide it (48). Though the plan fails due to Rex's deceitful nature, by bringing the kids into the middle of what should be adult affairs, the parents are failing to raise the kids, and instead are having the kids raise them. The strong distrust Rose Mary has for her husband is an extremely wrong example to set for her children. For instance, one time when Rex came home Rose Mary was so scared she hid in the bathtub with a knife out of a fear she has of her husband. The end result is one that is most likely unfathomable in a conventional family setting, "Dad started laughing and hugging Mom, who was laughing and hugging him. It was as if they were so happy they hadn't killed each other that they had fallen in love all over again" (78). The display the two put on was beyond dysfunctional because from start to finish as neither intentions are loving, but rather fearful ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. The Theme Of Childhood In The NovelFranny And Zooey Though not much is known about J.D. Salinger's childhood or family, a plethora of his works include overall themes of family and how different aspects of childhood can affect someone in the future (Wenke). In his novel, Franny and Zooey, this theme is an important part of the story (French). The story begins with Franny Glass' story, told in third person by an unknown narrator. She's taking a weekend off from college to meet her boyfriend, Lane Coutell, to eat lunch and spend the weekend with him for his college's football weekend. At lunch, Franny has a mental breakdown and tells Lane about how she hates all of the fake people she encounters. She meets many poets and they all write about what will interest people and not about what they actually feel. She finds beauty in the things that actually have important value to people rather than something that means nothing. Lane also questions her on the little green book she always carries around. She avoids the question until she can't and explains she got it in her college library, which she is obviously lying about. She proceeds to go to the bathroom and pass out. When she wakes up, Lane can tell something is wrong, but he no longer questions her. Then it switches to Zooey's story. It is narrated by the second eldest Glass sibling, Buddy Glass. Zooey and his mother, Bessie, are struggling to get along. She continuously questions him, and she babies Franny and only speaks of Seymour, his brother who committed suicide, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. A Perfect Day For Bananafish Essay During World War II, the United States was in desperate need of resources, after the events of the Great Depression. Since men were drafted into the war, unemployment rates dropped and the U.S. had successfully pulled themselves out of the depression, while also creating a new kind of materialism. Salinger, the author of "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", sets the mood for the story immediately. The story opens up with Muriel sitting in her hotel room, painting her nails and fixing her Saks blouse, the same hotel as some New York advertising salesmen. Later in the story, Seymour creates an imaginative creature called the Bananafish, who are known to encounter bananas in a cave and eat so many bananas, that they are unable to fit back out through the hole. Just as this fake species does, Muriel and the rest of the world will ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Seymour is sick and his condition that he's dealing with would be defined today as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. First of all, any returning soldier is going to go through multiple difficulties, when handling with reality. Seymour Glass can't deal with how everyone is so wrapped up into consumption and luxuries, especially after seeing the horrors of war and death. Another example of the Bananafish theory would be Seymour's struggles with getting himself enveloped into the war. His experiences caused him a lot of pain and it's difficult to get out of this mental state. In addition to his PTSD, no one is sympathetic towards Seymour's problems; Muriel and her parents only believe he's crazy. It's apparent Muriel doesn't care for Seymour when she never spends time with him, and she forgets where she put the poem book he gave her. This explains why Seymour spends time with children, such as Sybil and Sharon, because they can't detect his "insanity". He tries his best to attain his lost innocence, so that he can run away from the tangible ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. A Perfect Day For Bananafish Essay Erin Thickpenny ENG 122 Ruhlmann 27 September 2017 A Perfect Day for Bananafish Synecdoche Essay What on earth is a bananafish? How does it connect to the real world? In J.D. Salinger short story Perfect Day for Bananafish we discover what truly is a bananafish and how the banana fish relates to the common man and their daily struggles. As we get into the story we are given a brief glimpse into the main character Seymour Glass and what he displays a multiple different behaviors with different characters. Salinger expresses the use of As the story progresses, Salinger uses conflict, characterization, and symbolism to demonstrate how a traumatic experience, like going to war can change a person's perception. As the short story progresses ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Seymour has become an outsider in a world that is directed by materialism, gluttonous, and unimportance , has no real outlet for the complicated emotions he carries around inside him. He has been damaged psychologically by the war and is clearly not receiving the medical care he needs. Muriel, along with her family live in a world he can no longer understand, and his behavior in that world is unsuitable, disturbing, and dangerous. Seymour in the story displays classic signs of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder "PTSD", and at that time no one knew exactly what PTSD was and back then it was called shell shock and was at an all time high and "during the early years of World War II, psychiatric casualties had increased some 300 percent when compared with World War I, even though the pre–induction psychiatric rejection rate was three to four times higher than World War I. At one point in the war, the number of men being discharged from the service for psychiatric reasons exceeded the total number of men being newly drafted."("The Evolution of Post–Traumatic Stress Disorder!" 2012) Seymour is sadly a prime example of an undiagnosed case and as the story displays his obvious symptoms ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. The Glass Castle Jeanette Walls Family Struggles Throughout life, many people face struggles of trying to make it, and Jeanette Walls' family has experienced many of the life struggles, including homelessness, hunger, and unemployment by trying to get by. There are many instances in The Glass Castle that show Jeanette's life and her family's struggle over the course of her growing up. The Walls family struggles bring a positive outlook on life with a creative and lucky turn with each event. Many times in the book, the Walls struggle to make ends meet. Jeanette talks about the many creative ways that their parents tried to make things better, but many times the children would go hungry. The kids would sleep in cardboard boxes as beds, and they did this because their parents made it sound ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For the most part, Rex had a steady job, and Rosemary still had a majority of the money from her inheritance. The family had regular meals, and the children were enrolled in a school that praised them for their giftedness (95), but soon Lori began to fall short by struggling with seeing. The school began to send notes saying that she needed glasses, but Rosemary insisted that, "glasses were crutches" and "if you had weak eyes, you needed exercise to make them strong" (96). The house was a grand old house that brought many things to the family. When the family pulled up to the house, Jeanette writes, "we were definitely moving up in the world" (94). Once Rex got fired from his job, the bills began to pile up, and they started by using a hand washing–machine, airing the house out by night, but the house began to give. Termites had taken the house and ate away at the floor. Rex's way to fixing the problem was to take beer cans and smashing them into the holes of the floor. It was a creative and fun way for the kids to help around the house. Jeanette said that the floor began to look like Swiss cheese. When in Welsh, the family had virtually nothing, and would save money by never using heat, never using electricity, and never stepping foot in the kitchen because the electrical work in there was dangerous. Every night the children would cuddle together because the nights in Welsh were very cold. They would never complain because they knew that this was they way to make ends meet for the struggling ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Analysis Of J. D. Salinger's A Perfect Day For Bananafish War can change people to the point of suicide, which is what Seymour has felt in his life after the war. J.D. Salinger wrote a story called "A perfect day for Bananafish". This story is about a man that was a veteran in WWII, who has acquired a few mental problems because of it. When he meets a little girl named Sybil, and they go into the ocean together. They see these fish that eat bananas until they get too fat to get out of their hole and die. When he goes back to the hotel, by the elevator a he accuses a woman for looking at his feet. Then he goes to his room and shoots himself through his right temple. I believe that the the theme of the story is guilt, and the author shows that by showing Seymour kissing Sybil's foot then killing himself after a woman looks at his own. The author uses setting in the story like its paradise. A beautiful resort on the beach in Florida of 1948. Seymour is basically all alone and his only friend is al little girl named Sybil. Sybil enforces the setting by being this perfect little girl playing on the beach. The water is home to bananafish that Sybil shows Seymour. Which also enforces the setting of a happy, beautiful place. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He has mental problems that have been created from his experience of World War Two. Seymour has attempted to commit suicide 2 times already, one by crashing a car into a tree, then trying to jump out of a window. The only way to pass the time in florida for him is to go to the beach and have fun with the children. He meets the secondary character named sybil. Sybil is a sweet little girl that loves playing with Seymour. Seymour doesn't change too much throughout the story, he has always loved playing with children and attempting suicide. Only this time he successfully commits suicide by shooting himself in the head. Sybil is not dynamic because she only shows the same personality throughout the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. A Family on the Move in The Glass Castle by Jeannette Wals The Glass Castle is about a very poor family that constantly moves from place to place just to seemingly stay alive. The book addresses the many social issues that we deal with every day. One of the most important social issues disputed on a daily basis are the kind of parents we want to be and what we want to teach our children for their future. In this memoir we are able to see how Rex and Rosemary Walls teach their children the values of everyday life. The parents try to teach their children that whatever life throws at you, you can handle it with resilience. The parents accomplished the goals for their children by telling them that they loved them and to never give up. The Walls children gained exceptional values that may not have been learned had these children grown up with different parents. Both parents in the Glass Castle ultimately help Jeannette and the rest of her family become the people they are today, and would not have been able to accomplish this without the parents. Jeannette Walls is the main character in the Glass Castle. She begins to have faith in her father that he will keep his promises. Early in the memoir her father teaches her a life lesson to always face your fears no matter how tough they may seem. In his words "... but you can't cling to the side your whole life, that one lesson every parent needs to teach a child is 'If you don't want to sink, you better figure out how to swim..." (66). In this part of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. The Glass Castle Jeanette Walls Family Struggles Throughout life, many people face struggles of trying to make it, and Jeanette Walls' family has experienced many of the life struggles, including homelessness, hunger, and unemployment by trying to get by. There are many instances in The Glass Castle that show Jeanette's life and her family's struggle over the course of her growing up. The Walls family struggles bring a positive outlook on life with a creative and lucky turn with each event. Many times in the book, the Walls struggle to make ends meet. Jeanette talks about the many creative ways that their parents tried to make things better, but many times the children would go hungry. The kids would sleep in cardboard boxes as beds, and they did this because their parents made it sound ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For the most part, Rex had a steady job, and Rosemary still had a majority of the money from her inheritance. The family had regular meals, and the children were enrolled in a school that praised them for their giftedness (95), but soon Lori began to fall short by struggling with seeing. The school began to send notes saying that she needed glasses, but Rosemary insisted that, "glasses were crutches" and "if you had weak eyes, you needed exercise to make them strong" (96). The house was a grand old house that brought many things to the family. When the family pulled up to the house, Jeanette writes, "we were definitely moving up in the world" (94). Once Rex got fired from his job, the bills began to pile up, and they started by using a hand washing–machine, airing the house out by night, but the house began to give. Termites had taken the house and ate away at the floor. Rex's way to fixing the problem was to take beer cans and smashing them into the holes of the floor. It was a creative and fun way for the kids to help around the house. Jeanette said that the floor began to look like Swiss cheese. When in Welsh, the family had virtually nothing, and would save money by never using heat, never using electricity, and never stepping foot in the kitchen because the electrical work in there was dangerous. Every night the children would cuddle together because the nights in Welsh were very cold. They would never complain because they knew that this was they way to make ends meet for the struggling ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Dewey's Idea Of Family In The Green Glass Sea Book Have you ever wanted to learn the deeper meaning of the Green Glass Sea book, well know you can with new Glasses, just kidding, but we can teach you about how Deweys Idea of family has Changed throughout this novel. For example, Dewey's ideas of family's leaving, family's that care for you, and the idea that a family keens into your Situation One idea of family that has changed for Dewey is that your family won't leave you. For example, in chapter "For the Duration", Dewey learns that her father had died. Also, before that, in the Chapter "Morganville", we learn that before Dewey came to the Hill, she was alone with aunt for 2 months while Morgansville was being built. Because of this, we can see that she most likely had the idea that family always left, and never stayed to care for her. This was changed after Dewey mistakenly thought that Suze's family was leaving the hill without Dewey, but Suze later proves her wrong. This means that her family won't leave her, because Suzes family didn't, and it seems as though this is when she realizes that family ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For example, in the chapter "Traveling", it says, "Mrs. Kovack, who has been doing her good Christian duty by taking Dewey in. Or so she tells Dewey every time she gets". This means that she doesn't really care about Dewey because she only cares because she needs to. Also, Dewey's Nana was probably a friend with Kovack to because they are neighbors so this would mean that she only did this because of her friendship, not care. This was changed when Dewey mistakenly thinks that Suzes family is leaving the hill without her, but Suze promptly corrects Dewey. This means that Suze cared for her because she had to our of the way to help Dewey, which she didn't need to, so that signifies caring. All in all, the idea that family cares for you have only been with Suze for the end parts of the book when she was under the care of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. My Family History In The Glass Castle By Jeanette Walls Unlike The Glass Castle, author Jeanette Walls, it is not difficult for me to talk about my family history. It is easy for me simply because I was lucky enough and never experienced the hardships that Jeannette and her family went through. My full name is Ana Torres and I was born on October 21, 2000. I was born in Manila, Philippines but migrated to San Diego, California at a young age of 7. I am the youngest out of three kids. I have an older brother named Miguel who is 23 years old this year. He joined the Navy and is currently in Virginia. He wears glasses, has short hair, and likes to dress up like a hype–beast. He is also stubby, hard–headed, and likes to pull pranks. Lastly, I have an older sister named Camille who is currently 21 years old. She joined the Air Force after college and is currently stationed in Germany. She is also super short just like my brother and I. My parents are Beth and Joel Torres. Both of them are Filipino however, my mom mentioned that we have some east– Asian blood in us, most likely Chinese or Japanese due to the many countries that conquered the Philippines. My mom and dad met through a mutual friend and at first my mom said that she actually disliked my dad but soon grew fond of him. They then got married in 1994, the same year they had my brother. My mom looks like a typical Asian mom with short, curly hair. She likes to lecture a lot about life and is super over–protective. My dad on the other hand also looks like a typical Asian dad. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Salinger's Franny and Zoey Essay Salinger's Franny and Zoey It is the consensus of most critics that Seymour Glass is the most important character and the leader of the Glass family. This is a point that is obvious from the stories that Salinger has written about the Glass family. Seymour is looked up to and revered by all the children in the family and is his mothers "favorite, most intricately calibrated, her kindest son"(Franny 89). When catastrophe strikes in Franny and Zooey, the only person Franny wants to talk to is Seymour. Why is Seymour the most important person in the Glass family? Seymour is the eldest child. Therefore, all will come after him. In a sense, nothing new can be done after Seymour has done it. All that is left is to imitate and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Also, Buddy is a leader because he is naturally responsible and does what he is told. The main difference between the children's reactions to the two is that of an equal versus a parent. Buddy sounds like a parent but Seymour sounds like an equal. Seymour is also the resident problem solver. We see the evidence of this in Seymour when Buddy tells a story about his younger brother Waker. It was late on the night of Walt and Waker's birthday when Seymour and Buddy came upon a fight in the living room. Apparently the young Waker had given away his new birthday present to a boy in the park. His parents were incensed that Waker had given it away just because the boy had asked for it. When it becomes clear that the argument will not be solved in this way, Seymour steps in and Buddy says "... and I knew, from experience, that peace in our living room was about to be restored, however miraculously"(240). The final reason why Seymour is considered the main character of the Glass family narrative is that he continues to leave his mark on his family. As the eldest child Seymour has affected everyone in his family. His suicide is their greatest tragedy. In Franny and Zooey, we clearly see the evidence. Throughout the bathroom scene between Zooey and Bessie, we see much of the effects of Seymour's suicide on his mother. "She was wearing her usual at–home vesture–– what her son Buddy... called ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. The Influence Of The Walls Family In The Glass Castle In the memoir, The Glass Castle, the Walls family are known for not living in one place for an extremely long time. Just a few places that the Walls family lived were: Phoenix, Las Vegas, San Francisco, Midland, Blythe and Battle Mountain. Jeannette Walls, the author, was most influenced by her time living in Battle Mountain. This is shown by the numerous experiences that she had with her family which changed who she was as a person and eventually formed her into the person and author she is today. Battle Mountain, Nevada was one location that the Walls family had decided to live in while moving from city to city and state to state. Battle Mountain was also one of the cities that the Walls family stayed to live in for the longest. One experience that Jeanette had in Battle Mountain was the scenery that it had, she loved going to the desert. Jeanette tells from the book, "The thing we liked to do most was go exploring in the desert...Dad could tell what kind of minerals and ore were in the ground from the color of the rock and soil, and they taught us what to look for"(55). During this part of the book the Walls Family had recently arrived in Battle Mountain and the children were not in school yet. But Rex and Rose ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Dad lost his job,"(67) Lori informed Jeanette. Which was not a surprise, but it was the job that he had for the longest period of time. Because Rex lost his job and the family had no real source of income the Walls were left with crumbs to eat. But Mary Rose could not let her family live a life of constant worrying about food, so she gets herself a job. A job as a teacher at the school which Lori, Jeanette and Brian attend. This is the first time that Mary Rose has a job and it shows Jeanette as well as the other children that women are also allowed to have jobs and make money. That men are not the only ones who are allowed to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Pride In J. D. Salinger's Franny And Zooey In J.D Salinger's Franny and Zooey, the theme of pride is heavily explored and is essential to the personality and development of the main characters. This is done through recounting the experiences of members of the Glass family, a household of intellectuals who never seem to be satisfied with their present state of being. A former star on the radio show "It's a Wise Child", the eldest sibling, Seymour, who committed suicide later in his lifetime, felt it his duty to act as a religious guide to his younger siblings and instills in them the values of Buddhism– a factor which later contributed to much dissatisfaction amongst his younger brother and sister. Moreover, Salinger stresses the excessive pride of Franny, who views her contemporaries as inferior, and the resultant detriment of such a temperament. Zooey's egotistic nature is likewise explored, along with the negative impact of his disillusionment with his education and those around him. When she is first introduce, Franny, one of the titular characters, faces ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Also like Franny, he feels badly about himself for doing so. Zooey, moreover, averts any blame as to why he turned out the way he did onto his brothers and the education he received from them. His abhorrence of his brothers manifests itself to such an extent that, says Zooey, he "could murder them both without even batting an eyelash." Zooey complains that his preachness and borderdom– a result of the way in which he was raised by his brothers– prevents him from even sitting down and maintaining a conversation with others. Likewise, he is discontent with the fact that he was a celebrity as a child– an additional factor on which he blames his persona. As is evident from his conversation with his mother, the impact of being "Wise Children" prevented him from conversing with others and, by extension, interacting properly in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. The Glass Castle Family Issues For my book report project I choose to read a memoir by Jeannette Walls titled The Glass Castle. This book takes the reader through the painful years of Jeannette's childhood while she and her three siblings struggle to survive due to their irresponsible and self–centered parents. At the beginning of the book, the family was living in California moving frequently from town to town. Jeannette's father, Rex was a major alcoholic. Because of his alcoholism, he found it very hard to maintain a job. He would become violent in fits of rage, sometimes injuring his own wife and children. The family had to be particularly cautious in what they did or said as to not set him off or avoid beatings. They would "skedaddle" or spontaneously relocate ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The main problems being alcoholism, child abuse, and poverty. These three key concerns are completely intertwined with each other. Jeannette's fathers' alcoholism stems from possibly being sexually abused by his own mother during childhood. As he attempts to drown his sorrows, he in tern neglects his children. This is particularly important because when they went to live with the grandma, she started to sexually abuse Brian, Jeannette's younger brother. Rex could have possibly prevented this had he been more involved in their lives and less concerned about getting drunk. Rex's severe alcoholism causes him to be extremely irresponsible and reckless. He is unable and unwilling to keep a job long enough for the family to settle anywhere. Although Rex does physically and mentally abuse his family, he is also loving toward them in a very tough and "behind–the– scene" type of way. The living conditions of the family during this time were horrendous. They often found food and clothes from dumpsters. Jeannette's hair was never brushed because her mother said it was the kids responsibility to take care of themselves. While living at the grandmothers house in West Virginia, the kids were allowed one bath a week. They were given four inches of water and all four kids shared the same bath water. Because the parents did not want to pay to have their trash collected, they decided to trick the kids into digging a hole in the yard. The shack they moved into after leaving the grandmothers house had a big hole in the ceiling so when it would rain outside, it would also rain into their kitchen. Rex and Rose Mary refused to apply for welfare or food stamps because they "didn't accept handouts" from anyone. They were completely on their own and so were their children. Other kids would make fun of the Walls children because they dressed in rags, lived without electricity and didn't have food to eat. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. The Glass Castle : Family Values, Information About Social... Describe Jeannette's childhood, specifically her socialization or the process by which she acquired family values, information about social expectations, and survival strategies. This is a summary on the Glass Castle is about a young woman name Jeannette begins to look back of the pasts on her childhood and how her parents' choices affected her and her siblings. When Jeannette was three– year–old, she was boils her own hotdogs and got burned horribly that she went to the hospital. After few days, her father got her out of bed and left the hospital without paying the bill. The most memories about the Walls of her childhood focus in the desert and how the family move to different desert towns to settling in as long as their father can hold a job. He has such paranoia about the state and society and he also have dealt with his alcoholism that has leads them to move often. They used to settle in small mining town, Battle Mountain, and Nevada while Jeannette and her young brother Brian spend their time exploring the desert. Their mother is an artist and takes a break from it to hold down a job as a teacher to extend their stay. But however, a law enforcement has compels the family to leave and move to Phoenix where mother has inherited a house from her grandmother. In Phoenix, it offers the family stability like mother's house is very large and the children can enrolled in school and father have a job to keep steady of electrician jobs for a while. Jeannette feel so annoy when ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Day For Bananafish A Perfect Day for Bananafish takes place at a hotel resort in Florida. The story begins with Muriel Glass, a young woman who has been married to Seymour for five years. Muriel is on the phone with her mom. Muriel's mother worries that something is wrong with Seymour, and that her daughter is no longer safe with him. Since his return from World War Two, he has been acting unusual. He seems to be incapable to function in social places as he tends to isolate himself from other adults. The story then takes place at the beach outside of the hotel. There, a little girl around the age of four years old is waiting for her mother to finish applying sunscreen to her back. Sybil kept repeating "See more glass" to which her mother could not understand the meaning. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Throughout their time staying at the hotel, Sybil and Seymour have developed a friendship. The two head into the ocean together where Seymour explains "bananafish" to Sybil. Seymour states they are "very ordinary–looking fish" that swim into a hole where there are a lot of bananas. Once in the hole the fish feast on as many bananas as they can eat. After they eat so much "they're so fat they can't get out of the hole again". Since they cannot fit back through the hole they entered, the bananafish end up dying there. Sybil believes Seymour's story and therefore exclaims that she saw a bananafish with six bananas in its mouth. Seymour then kissed the arch of Sybil's foot and returned her back to the beach. After the two went their own ways, Seymour made his way back to the hotel. In the elevator he accuses a woman of staring at his feet. Seymour makes it back to his room where he opens the door to find Muriel asleep on one of the twin beds. He took a gun out of his suitcase, sat on the other twin bed, looked at Muriel for one last time, the fired a bullet through his right ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. The Walls Family In The Glass Castle After reading The Glass Castle, I felt I could relate to the Walls family in some ways. Although there is no question her childhood was much worse than mine; I have been through my fair share of challenges. Overcoming various struggles throughout my childhood made me the person I am today. Like Jeannette, our fathers are similar to a certain caliber. Like Rex, my father used to drink frequently. Of course I never knew that because I was just an oblivious child. Even though he drank I never suspected it, for he was always very nice to me and took care of me before himself. I could never distinguish his personality from drunk to sober; he behaved the same. Another parallel between Rex and my dad, Jeff, both men never made the wisest choices. He married five women and has one or more children with three of them. Even though my dad made poor choices, he is undeniably a great guy. Just like in The Glass Castle, alcoholism, and specific family dynamics have affected my family and me in multiple ways. My father has seven children including me. The boys are Joseph, Justin, Jonathan, and me, Javen. Ironically they are all names that start with the letter J. My sisters from him are Malinda, Shandell, and Cicily. Malinda and I are the closest out of all the others. I only consider ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He informed me that we were making another trip to Portsmouth to help them move into our house. I was so pissed at him I didn't talk the entire trip; which was close to four hours long. It took two days to get all of their stuff around and packed into the Uhaul. Tammy put all the burnable stuff in trash bags. She sent my dad to burn it all. She failed to mention that she put live .22 rounds in one of the trash bags. There was a loud bang and one fired off and hit my dad in the shin. It left a nice hole in his leg. From that moment on I knew, she was a halfwit. When we got back to Carey I went straight to my room and didn't help them unpack ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Dysfunctional Family In The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls is a memoir about her life growing up with her dysfunctional family. Jeannette and her siblings in poverty and were very independent due to their parents. The Glass Castle should be a required summer reading for the class of 2019. The story gives reader a chance to view the world in a different meaningful perspective of a poor happy child. It also helps guide readers with meaningful advice. Through her youth, Jeannette faced many hardships due to her negligent parents. Even so she always had an sanguine outlook on life. Jeannette fell out of a moving car and was abandoned. Her father didn't even notice until hours after. Instead of being shocked or terrified of the situation, she laughs it off. "I started ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. A Tree Grows In Brooklyn Analysis A Tree Grows in Brooklyn How did Francie mature as time progressed throughout the early years of her life? When Francie grew up and had to help support and keep the family together, she gained an early peek of maturity and womanhood. She then gained the privilege to be independent and earn the title of assistance. Meanwhile, as time passed she lost her father, Johnny Nolan, and had to earn income to keep the family afloat to continue to progress despite the hardship and heartbreaking sacrifices that lies ahead. From a little girl to a young woman, Francie learned to do things a lot earlier to help support and keep her family together with the power of gaining and losing at the same time. "Everyone said it was a pity that a slight pretty woman ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye and Franny and Zooey Director Robert Zemeckis once stated, "We don't function well as human beings when we're in isolation." This quotation pertains to the protagonists in both The Catcher in the Rye and Franny and Zooey by J. D. Salinger. Both protagonists overcome estrangement when they learn from their siblings the underlying reason behind their feelings of isolation. In The Catcher in the Rye, Holden Caulfield fails to form a connection with others at Pencey Prep and escapes to New York City in an attempt to overcome his alienation. Similarly, in Franny and Zooey, Franny Glass seeks religion to cope with her social isolation at college. Initially, both characters are isolated from their peers because their judgmental attitudes make them unable to form a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As each novel progresses, both protagonists seek instant pleasure in attempt to escape from their isolation, but their desperation for comfort leads to their deteriorating health. Holden attempts to escape his feelings of alienation by going to New York City, but in his desperate attempt to connect with others, his overall health worsens. Struggling with his loneliness, he reluctantly agrees to have a prostitute come to his room at the hotel: "I was feeling so depressed I didn't even think" (Catcher 91). Holden's desperation has made him travel from Pencey Prep, in Pennsylvania, all the way to New York City to escape his feeling of isolation from his fellow students. Even though it goes against his moral values about sex, he desperately reaches out to anyone who might be willing to ease his loneliness, and that leads him to accept the offer of letting a prostitute come to his hotel. Although once she arrives, he feels insecure and refuses to have sex. The prostitute is a symbol of instant gratification that Holden initially thought he wanted to comfort his isolation, but ends up feeling too insecure to have sex because the prospect that his first sexual experience would be with a prostitute depresses him. When Holden refuses to pay the extra charge that the prostitute requests, she gets annoyed and calls her "boss," Maurice. Eventually, this situation results in Holden being assaulted. After this beating, Holden feels like he is at his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. J.D. Salinger's A Perfect Day for Ortgies Essay J.D. Salinger's A Perfect Day for Bananafish At first glance, J.D. Salinger's short story 'A Perfect Day for Bananafish' is the story of a psychically–torn war veteran whose post–traumatic stress moves him to take his own life while on a second honeymoon with his wife. Indeed, that is the story, but that first glance does not reveal the inner motives and symbolic pathways Seymour Glass takes to reach the final decision to end his life. The carefully placed details and minute innuendoes are deliberate on Salinger's part, and they represent pieces of the puzzle to find out what is really happening in the protagonist's head. Indeed, 'A Perfect Day' is just one part of the Glass family saga, and Seymour's character and family ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Now, if instead of ?See More? Glass we define him as ?See More Glass? then I have a slightly more cryptic interpretation for his name. Now, the Glass family is Jewish, as is established in Salinger?s Nine Stories, and Seymour is a veteran of World War II. Before America?s involvement in the war, on November 9th, 1938, there was a very violent uprising of Reich citizens against the Jewish population orchestrated by Joseph Goebbels. During that time thousands Jewish citizens were rounded up for concentration camps and their businesses were destroyed, littering the streets with glass from their storefronts. That night came to be known as the Kristallnacht, or in English, the ? Night of Broken Glass.? Though I know there is no direct link to this night in the story, and indeed it took place before Seymour was even in Europe, it has a direct link to the first major violence against Jews as well as a sharp spike in the number of Jewish adults who committed suicide to escape the horrors of the Reich. The perhaps far–fetched, I feel this more esoteric interpretation of Seymour?s name could well represent the link to the horrors he experienced during his tenure in World War II. A name is a metaphysical representation of a person, but there are physical hints in Seymour?s characterization that hint towards a greater purpose in his actions. Muriel tells her mother that he wears his bathrobe on the beach so that people won?t see his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Franny And Zooey Essay In the novel, Franny and Zooey by J.D Salinger, it is overwhelmed with many themes; the novel also reveals an important message on finding ones self and dealing with the difficulties and struggles of life; these themes consist of religion, egos, and culture. Franny Glass struggles with the phoniness and egotism that spreads through society. She longs to escape her problems and decides to get away from it by withdrawing into spirituality religious values through the Jesus Prayer. She soon realizes the down fall of her solution and through her pains and challenges; she learns how to deal with social unpleasantness. Franny learns that she needs to shed her egotism and act unselfishly. The novel also has many different symbols with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The novel also has very much to do with Buddhist thoughts, mostly about the idea of "no– knowledge." To achieve wisdom, the Buddhist must clear his head of any negative thoughts or distractions. This process is totally opposite to Western education, the education that Franny and Zooey live in, which is mentioned a lot of times in the book and stuffs its students with knowledge. Franny criticizes that the poets at her school does not describe anything beautiful in their work, but only get into her head. She is disappointed in herself, as well, for trying to save wisdom through the Jesus Prayer as others save knowledge. But what she does not know is that true "no–knowledge" cannot be saved. In the beginning of the book, it shows that Franny's boyfriend, Lane, has the biggest ego in the book. The course to Buddhist "no–knowledge" is very difficult to do. The person would have to let go of their personal ego and selfish concerns to reach open minded beauty. Franny dislikes her professors at her school because they are absorbed in their own egos, and whatever detachment they have is and detachment from humanity. Buddhists try to get rid of their negativity ego and gain up the positive part of the ego. Zooey tells Franny she has to act, as that is her God– given talent, and use her ego as best she can. Franny cannot let the negative part of her ego interfere by making her criticize the other actors. Instead, she must focus ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Day For Bananafish In "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," J. D. Salinger weaves an innocent enough story that goes wildly astray at the end. Throughout the bulk of the work, Salinger details disinterested and awkward conversations between various parties interspersed with an air of caution. The story culminates with a surprising act of suicide by Seymour Glass, the character throughout which most of the story centers. This abrupt ending is written in such a manner that the reader must immediately reflect upon the rest of the story in order to understand the reasons behind this action. As a whole, Salinger's short story involves a recounting of important themes from American society in the post– World War II era. These themes include post–traumatic stress for returning ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Materialism can be seen throughout the story. The setting at a vacation resort in Florida is the first sign. In the opening line, the recounting that the hotel is occupied primarily by advertising men provides a further indication of the material nature of society. This is also relevant in the phone conversation between Muriel and her mother. Throughout the conversation, the reader is exposed to a situation most notably characterized by faulty communication with each participant in the conversation failing to connect with the other's point of view. The one exception to this is the topic of fashion as it becomes quite relevant that both Muriel and her mother are strongly influenced by these material things. Muriel particularly discusses the disdainful way that the wife of an associate wears a green dress (Dermot 2). It appears that the topics most important to these individuals are quite superficial in nature. Perhaps the most significant aspect of the story in relation to materialism is the analogy of the bananafish itself. Seymour explains to Sybil that bananafish swim around looking for holes. When they find a hole, they swim in and eat all the bananas in the hole, becoming so engorged that they are unable to fit back out. Sadly, this causes the death of the bananafish. This story undoubtedly serves as foreshadowing to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Perfect Day For Bananafish At the end of "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," Seymour Glass commits suicide while on vacation in Florida with his wife, Muriel, by shooting himself in the head while Muriel sleeps on the twin bed next to him. It seems like a crazy thing to do. People would say that only someone with severe mental problems does something like that. Seymour is a military veteran, a poet, a "Wise Child," and an extremely complicated man. A number of J.D. Salinger's writings reveal pieces of Seymour's character, including "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," "Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters," Franny and Zooey," and "Seymour – an Introduction," which I read, hoping to gain more insight on why Seymour does what he does. First of all, it is important to know that the Salinger often writes about the Glass family; two parents and seven children of which Seymour is the eldest. Buddy is two years younger. All four of the Salinger pieces that I am focusing on are 'written by' Buddy. Buddy is not physically present in three out of the four stories – the only one he writes where he is present is "Raise High ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The one that stands out to me when trying to gain insight into Seymour's viewpoint is "The happiness of being with people. –Kafka" (178). This quote is significant on many levels: When Seymour commits suicide, he Muriel is with him in the room, although on their vacation they spent very little time together. She, sewing her clothes and painting her nails, and him, on the beach talking to the little girl, Sybil. Seymour is hesitant to be "with people" on their wedding day, and his elated unsteadiness seems to be a darker, panicked elation, and he would rather just be happy with Muriel. There is something about Seymour's constant awareness of happiness that suggests that he is deeply ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. J.D Salinger’s Franny and Zooey Essay The Pessimistic and Bitter Franny Glass of J.D Salinger's Franny and Zooey Young adulthood is often a time for maturing spiritually. Franny Glass, the protagonist of J.D Salinger's novel, Franny and Zooey, began to question her religious beliefs, during this time of spiritual growth. Franny's quest for religion caused her to become pessimistic, bitter, and emotionally unstable. Franny held many strong beliefs that caused her to view her surroundings pessimistically. After spending three years contently in college, Franny changed her view of the college experience. She decided that college was "one more dopey inane place in the world.'; (Salinger, 146) She failed to see college as a place that allows one to increase his or her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Similarly, Franny felt she was "sick of liking people and wished to g–d she would meet somebody she could respect. Franny's extreme bitterness caused her to feel no respect towards others. As a result of Franny's problematic religious questions, she viewed her surroundings very bitterly. During Franny's young adulthood, she underwent a period of emotional instability. She felt as if she was a patient "in a lunatic asylum'; (Salinger, 192), and her brother, Zooey, was "another patient'; (Salinger, 192) who attempted to treat her. By comparing herself to a patient in an asylum, Franny acknowledged the fact that she was emotionally unstable. Even though Franny was "losing weight like mad and worrying Bessie and Les';(Salinger, 149), she still refused to eat or seek help. Although Zooey constantly advised Franny that she "[didn't] have enough sense to eat, when someone [brought] her [food]';, Franny was so overwhelmed with her religious quest that she disregarded her need for food. As a result of Franny's pessimistic views ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Examples Of Family Forgiveness In The Glass Castle By... Family Forgiveness [Robert Browning once said "Good to forgive;best to forget."]In book The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls there is a poor family that moves from place to place and house to house. The kids are finding it hard to get use to their environments, and the situation is no better with their drunk dad and selfish mom. There are a lot of situations where the family argues or fight with each other and other people they meet along the way,but they end up forgiving each other in the tough situations they go through.The book shows that *it is good to forgive people but if they keep mess up it's hard to trust them again.* When jeannette was younger her family were always in arguments and fights, which would cause the family to have ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Theme Of The Family And Glass Menagerie In the novel Angela's Ashes and the play Glass Menagerie, each character confronts many obstacles that it caused by social standards, the three main suspects of these obstacles are, the mindset of "breadwinner", Southern values and Irish pride, and the era of the two stories. The McCourt family is a family consisting of one female and four male personnel, not including the dead members, and it is depicted in the novel that Frank, the oldest brother, to take the of "breadwinner" of the family and everyone is dependent on him. The call for Frank to become the breadwinner was a huge role for him an example of this dependency is during when Angela, the mother, was sick and wanted to drink lemonades and in response, Frank took initiative and stole lemonade for his mother, but also stole bread and jam for his likewise helpless brothers. This scene from the book showcases how Frank was anticipated to accept the role of the Father since the main cause of income, the Father, has left. Similarly, in Glass Menagerie, Tom is unwillingly forced to take the role of the "breadwinner". An example of Tom being the Father of the family is, "House, house! Who pays rent on it, who makes a slave of himself to–" (Pg. 24, Tennessee). The mindset of the society at the time when this play and novel was produced, is that the male would be the one in charge of making the money and the females doing house work, this family culture greatly affected both the protagonist as they are to provide instead of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Analysis Of The Glass Of The Glass When all the knowledge in the world fails to bring you happiness in life, where do you turn? In the case of the Glass Siblings, the answer to this question is spiritual enlightenment. Specifically, they are interested in Eastern religious philosophies. References to these philosophies – such as Taoism, Buddhism, and Hinduism – are found throughout the Glass novellas. The beliefs of the various members of the Glass family are frequently revealed through the children they encounter or observe. Throughout the Glass stories, small children are portrayed as spiritually advanced, with much to teach adults. The novella, "Zooey," begins with the youngest male of the Glass family reading a letter that was written to him by Buddy, his elder brother. Buddy tells Zooey of a chance encounter that he had with a little girl at the butcher shop. In his conversation with the girl, Buddy discovers she has two boyfriends. He asks her for their names, to which she replies, "Bobby and Dorothy" (64). Her reply is what motivates Buddy to write his letter to Zooey. He reminds his younger brother, "that all legitimate religious study must lead to unlearning the differences, the illusory differences, between boys and girls, animals and stones, day and night, heat and cold" (67–68). In Buddy's eyes, the little girl's reply represents this ideology. She doesn't recognize that there is a difference between Bobby and Dorothy; she just knows that they are her "boyfriends." The butcher shop anecdote is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. The Dysfunctional Family : The Glass Menagerie, Death Of A... The dysfunctional family is apparent in many households in today's society, for a dysfunctional family is described as any condition in which healthy family functioning is interfered (Kansas State). There are many reasons for why families become dysfunctional in America today, and statistics are staggering, showing that about half of all marriages end in divorce. Dysfunctional families can be caused either by parents who are insufficient in their efforts to raise their children, or it can be the children who misbehave and cause ruckus in the household. While healthy families tend to return to their normal lives after a time of intense stress or crisis, dysfunctional families experience chronic or longing problems that never seem to fade (Kansas State). The dysfunctional family is a theme that has been used in many plays and novels in literary history, such as The Glass Menagerie, Death of a Salesman, and Ordinary People. Like real life, there are causes to why the families in these works became dysfunctional, and there are distinct characteristics and qualities of each. The Jarretts, Wingfields, and Lomans, fall victim to the plague of an unhealthy, dysfunctional household, and there are causes, characteristics, and even cures of this burden. A dysfunctional family can be caused by deficient and inferior parents who lack basic care taking skills that are needed to raise a healthy and functional family. These kinds of parents tend to teach their children the wrong ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. The Glass Menagerie Dysfunctional Family Essay The Dysfunctional Family In the play "The Glass Menagerie" by Tennessee Williams, Tom had a plan all of his own to quite his job, and go off and join the merchant marines. Tom hated his job and he felt the pressure of keeping up the family finances, as well as keeping up his sister and mother. Amanda, Toms mother appeared to want to control the family, and often told stories of her past growing up in the Mississippi delta. She claimed she had numerous gentlemen suitors, for example Amanda: "One Sunday afternoon in Blue Mountain–your mother received–seventeen`! –Gentlemen callers!"(1384 s.c 1) His sister Laura the very opposite of his mother, very shy and reserved, and suffered from anxiety anytime she was around people and even out of her own home. She got to the point she dropped out of business school and lingered around the city by day. Laura: "I couldn't go back there. I–threw up–on the floor!" (1387 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Amanda would find the smallest things to argue with him about. Whether it was he needed to comb his hair, or why he went to the movies so much. It seemed that Tom appeared to not like living in his home. He would leave every night, and say he was going to go out to the movie. Tom said that this gave him adventure, because he didn't get to have adventure at the shoe wear house were he worked. He had to work at the shoe warehouse to support his mother, and his sister Laura. A person could easily tell by reading this play that Tom did not enjoy working at this warehouse. He always seemed stressed, and unhappy with life in general. Tom had his own dream of joining the merchant marines, and didn't plan on telling anyone about it. Tom had the responsibility of taking care of this mother and his sister financially. Amanda soon figured out Toms plan when she found a letter from the merchant marines, and confronted Tom with it. She told him with anger to do what he wanted, but not until his sister Laura was taken care ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Franny And Zooey The novel Franny and Zooey was a higher–level reading. J.D. Salinger had written it in a unique fashion. This novel was split into two sections, one section was "Franny" and the other one was "Zoeey." Within reading Franny and Zooey, it had a lot of impacts on me as a student, reader and person in general. Franny and Zooey had an abundance of impacts on me as a student. As a student this novel included a lot of allusions and vocabulary I did not know. I was forced to learn all the vocabulary I did not know as well as the allusions because I needed to be able to understand the novel. I learned a lot from this novel because the allusions and vocabulary within were very intellectual. I enjoyed the small group discussions of the novel because ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the Glass family, the children are much more gifted and intelligent than the parents. But the children keep reminding each other that their parents must be loved and respected for everything they are and everything they have given their children. Even beyond love, family itself is a crucial theme in these stories. Zooey tells Franny that they have become "freaks" because their brothers taught them too much too young. But what their brothers taught also helps Franny out of her spiritual crisis in the end of the "Zooey" section. Through Seymour's lessons and Zooey's impression of Buddy's voice, Zooey channels enough support to talk Franny out of her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. A Family Of Flames In The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls A Family of Flames Michelle K. once explained, "some women are lost in the fire; some women are built from it". In Jeannette Walls memoir, The Glass Castle, she tells her long, adventurous story about growing up in a poor family who lived on the road for a majority of her childhood. Fire seems to be the only constant thing in her life, destroying but also building Jeannette as it grows. After Jeannette learns to control the fire that consumes her life, she obtains her own flame. Fire begins spreading through Jeannette's life at a young age. It all begins with catching her dress on fire while cooking hotdogs at three years old. When taken to the hospital, she is admitted with severe burns and is instructed to stay in the hospital. When her father Rex believes she has had a long enough stay in the hospital, Jeannette is checked ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Excited by her find she locks herself in the bathroom and begins to light toilet paper and when the flame grows bigger, she throws it in the toilet. Jeannette makes the statement, "I was torturing the fire, giving it life, and snuffing it out" (p. 33). Her father does the same thing to the Walls family throughout their lives. Rex Walls will support and provide for his family for a period of time and then allow his job and their money to quickly wither away. As the children age they instantaneously learn to provide for themselves while away from home. Jeannette starts fending for herself by digging through the trashcans in the bathrooms during and after lunch. After finding herself food, she pulls her feet up onto the toilet and eats quietly so no one would catch her. Clearly she learns at a young age if she wants anything she will have to get it herself. Jeannette and her siblings all lower the expectations they have of their parents. After Jeannette learns to control the fire that consumes her life, she obtains her own ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Day For Bananafish In "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", J.D. Salinger explores the rotting of innocence that comes with adulthood. The effects of materialism and corruption in human society, especially adults, is a common theme delivered in Salinger's works. "Critics think of the story as a metaphorical representation of what happens to sensitive people in a materialistic society filled with people who are as greedy as the Bananafish about which Seymour tells Sybil" (Shuman). It is being suggested that Seymour is a sensitive person trapped in a materialistic society and surrounded by people like Muriel who are as greedy as the Bananafish. Seymour acknowledges his wife's materialism as Muriel reveals, "He calls me Miss Spiritual Tramp of 1948" (Salinger). Seymour has dubbed his wife this title because he sees her narcissism and self–obsessive ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Salinger calls the readers to open their eyes to the truth about society. The story acts as a message to readers warning them of the shallowness and materialism present in the adult world. He believes the true form of innocence is only feasible in the youth of children. He also plays on the idea that when people become aware of the social decadence present in the world around them, they can no longer function properly in society. Salinger suggests that all adults are inevitably tainted by the cruelty that will ultimately lead to their own demise. This is an important topic to Salinger considering it is a reoccurring theme in several of his works. His actions in the war may have had a large impression on the way he views the world and the morality of others. Salinger uses his experiences to write stories for readers to view the world from his eyes. He wants readers to see society for what it really is and not be susceptible to the materialism, greed, vanity, and dishonesty that accompany it. Others should look deeper into their role in society and try to enlighten themselves on what is moral and what is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. The Importance Of Family Bond In The Glass Castle By... Imagine living in a life where everything around you is different from reality. Imagine running from the police, living wherever one can find, and still taking care of one's family just at the age of 16. Jeannette Walls had to deal with all of this and more in her early childhood. In the book "The Glass Castle", the author uses the characters, Jeannette and Rex Walls, to emphasize the importance of family bonds. Jeannette Walls has always been moving from place to place. Her father, Rex Walls, is a raging alcoholic who is constantly running from the police in order to keep his kids. They have lived in houses, their van, even outside. Imagine sleeping outside because the police are looking for the children of the parents who haven't paid a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. The Importance Of Family In The Glass Castle By Jeannette... In, The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls, Walls accounts her family throughout her childhood. To most people the Walls family would seem very peculiar. They live unbound by other's opinions, and prefer to stray from normality. The Walls family and the word aberrance define each other, yet, both have intricacies that go far beyond a simple definition. Originating in the mid 1500s, aberrant is derived from the verb, aberrare, which means 'to wander away'. The root of the word, errare, means 'to stray' and the prefix, ab– means 'away from'. Aberrant is now used as an adjective, with aberrance being used as a noun. The first known use being in 1536, aberrance has since changed from having a negative connotation, to now being used to simply describe something out of the ordinary. In fact, the usage today is similar to exceptional and extraordinary, which have very positive inflections. However, the definition or normal or ordinary is not so clear, which leads to a more complex definition of aberrance. One which, according to the user, can vary greatly. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This specific family was unusual compared to the rest of society. Rex and Rose Mary Walls, the parents of this family, have a different way of parenting. For example, Rose Mary states, '"Well, people in this country are too wasteful. It's my way of recycling'" (Jeannette 5). This demonstrates how the Walls family does things in a way that stands out of the normal. Rose Mary was digging through trash, looking for food to eat, although she could have easily found some elsewhere. This is just one example of being aberrant, as there are numerous examples and situations in which something or someone can be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...