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Showing posts from September, 2019

It's all coming together

     I can feel the narrator evolving, and I think you can to. In class we mentioned how the prologue narrator is beginning to shine through. This is especially in the scene with brother Tobitt and Brother Jack. In past scenes where his reality is contradicted, he doesn’t confront the people in charge, instead he tended to grow angry at himself for not expecting something wrong. Although he might’ve questioned Bledsoe and Emerson jr. he kept his thoughts internal. With Brother jack, the narrator asks directly “…isn’t the shooting of an unarmed man of more importsnce politically than the fact that he sold obscene dolls?” A charged question to Brother Jack is more than looking for an answer, the narrator is publicly challenging Jack’s motives. Jack goes a step further when he later starts to make jokes.      It’s interesting that the idea of humor as a tool is brought up again. I remember many people noticing that the vet reminded them of the prologue narrator. Back when we talked ab

Running

For most of the book so far, our narrator has denied his grandfather’s message. Yet the narrator can’t deny he’s been kept running for all his life. As reader’s we first see the narrator on the treadmill during the battle royale scene. The narrator is riding a kayak in the middle of a tsunami. The order of events seem to make no sense, but he flows from one to the next with no question. Only when he figures the blindfold trick does he seem to have some control. That doesn’t last for very long because he still has to face the big guy with whom he can’t cooperate. The narrator doesn’t realize he’s being kept running because this is life as he knows it. At college he’s kept running again by administration. Bledsoe is using the narrator in an attempt to show the “founders” what they want to see. Weirdly enough, Bledsoe is the one running the narrator. Once the narrator is revealed the truth, he grows angry at himself for not realizing and acting in the way he was expected to act. Even