“He’s hard to see him when you look for him” (86). These were Marie’s last word to David in Montana 1948 written by Larry Watson. In this fast read a 12 year old boy witnesses lying, cheating, deception, and death in order to preserve the Hayden family name. When David’s uncle frank pays the ultimate price, the secret comes out and sheds light on the truth. The sheriff Wes, David’s father has a difficult time deciding what is right and wrong when he investigates his only brother. Conflict within a family affects ones prospective of right and wrong. When Wes first confronted his brother about the sexual assault accusations, he thought the ordeal was over before it started. On the way back from his father’s house, Wes said to his wife, “I think the problem has been taken care of. Frank said he was going to cut it out” (85). This statement was shocking. Wes was the sheriff, and he has a duty to apprehend the guilty even if it’s his only brother. His wife knew he was wrong. She fired back, “It can’t be undone” (85). She knew what Wes has to do, he has to arrest his brother because he is guilty. It was apparent that Wes knew Frank is guilty and was not going to make an arrest because they were family. …show more content…
Even after he arrests him he is still trying to protect the family name. He brought Frank to his house, and locked him in the basement. He tells his wife and David as soon as they returned home. “He’s in the basement. Godamn it don’t you get it I’ve arrested him” (109).Wes’s decision to put frank in the basement shows he isn’t ready to let go of the family name. He does not want the community to know the ugly truth, and he is protecting his family. Wes granted him his only wish, “he didn’t want to go to jail not in this town” (109). Again this shows Wes will not do the right thing, because he is still has loyalty to the family name. Wes is not worried about breaking the law to protect the
We see his trust shift from Frank to Walter. It is clear to the audience who are the bad guys, but to ray it is something that is hard for him to believe. Initially, Ray follows Coutelle 's version on everything, Ray even falsifies a report to keep other officers from knowing the embarrassment of Frank’s injuries when he gets tricked into being bitten by a badger. From the beginning of the investigation, Frank is set on pinning the murder on James Looks Twice, however, the more Ray works with Walter, the more he realizes that Frank is not only looking at the wrong person, he is doing it on purpose. (Walter leads ray to find evidence and finds exactly what he thought happened in the beginning.)
The Other Wes admired his older brother Tony and even though Tony tried to keep Wes off the streets he didn’t listen and his mother didn’t want to believe that
1. How do you account for the similarities and differences between Wes and Wes? Point to specific examples that may have changed their trajectories. Aside from salient factor that both had the same first and last name, there are other similarities between these two Wes Moore. Both of them grew up in a single-parent household; one father was not present because he died of “acute epiglottitis, a rare but treatable virus that causes the epiglottis to swell and cover the air passages to the lungs” (15) and the other father decided not to be present. Both had older siblings; one had an older sister (Nikki) and the other one an older brother (Tony).
“The Jilting of Granny Weatherall” written by Katherine Anne Porter, is about a grandmother who is in denial that she is about to die. And “A Good Man is Hard to Find” written by Flannery O’Connor, is about a family that goes to visit family in Tennessee but are brutally murdered before they get there. These two stories share many similarities and differences in both the characters, and conflict.
Flannery O 'Connor was born in Savannah Georgia on March 25, 1925, as an only child. Her mother had to assume most of the responsibility of raising Flannery because her father died of lupus when she was fifteen. Flannery attended the Georgia State College for Women, and then went to the State University in Iowa where she received her master in Fine Arts (Gooch). Flannery’s life was very short, died at the age of 39, as she struggled with lupus, the same incurable disease that claimed the life of her father. O’Conner family was devoutly Catholic, which would influence her work and her outlook in life a great deal.
I want my family safe” (137). Is it really worth sacrificing a family’s reputaiton for social justice? It is apparent that David and his mother Gail are both innocent people despite Frank's crimes, but since they share Frank’s last name “Hayden”, it is inevitable for them to be scandalized by Frank’s
Because the author’s long-term thinking and determination helped him conquer the situational challenges he faced, unlike the other Wes Moore whose shortsightedness became his downfall, the purpose of the memoir is to persuade readers to work hard and overcome their obstacles. The other Wes Moore’s shortsightedness, especially regarding money, is what eventually led to his arrest and the end of his free life. One issue that contributed to Wes’s shortsightedness is that he was easily impressionable. Upon seeing another boy on the street, he was captivated by the “headset… [and] gold ring with a small diamond cut into the middle” (57) the boy proudly wore.
After Wes’s mom received this news and an incident that
A convict and a grandmother are more alike than the common one may think. In Flannery O’Conner’s story “A Good Man Is Hard to Find”, demonstrates a similarity between the Misfit and the grandmother showing that good and evil are not the same in all individuals. O’Conner uses these certain characters to show the difference between good and bad, but in the end both the grandmother and the Misfit show a change in character. Flannery O’Conner’s catholic background has influenced all her stories. O’Conner’s family was one of the first to live in her hometown of Milledgeville, Georgia she also attended parochial school.
The short story “A Good Man Is Hard To find” by Flannery O’Conner, was published in 1955. It was written in third person limited point of view. The story takes place in the 1940s after world two, family takes a road trip traveling to Florida, but their journey takes an unsuspecting turn. O’Conner uses foreshadowing, verbal and situational irony and symbolism that illustrates the theme of the effect of the selfishness of the grandmother upon the family. The first character introduced in the story is the protagonist, the unnamed grandmother.
Nature versus nurture is one of the most controversial debates in contemporary psychology. The debate concerning whether or not humans are born with the preset characteristics that will shape lives for years to come or whether actions are a result of the events and the environment that pave the way for our behavioral characteristics. Capote’s “In Cold Blood” gives the audience a detailed look into the upbringing of the character Perry Smith, creating a sympathetic outlook towards his past and attempting to bring a sense of understanding as to how a seemingly harmless young man could brutally murder four innocent people. In the case of Perry Smith, nurture was the cause of his actions in regards to the Clutter family murders.
The Purpose of Psychopaths in “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” In the short story “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” a family of six meets their demise on the side of the road in Georgia after a gang of convicts lead by The Misfit brutally murders each member of the family. The story starts off in an upbeat tone and sets up a seemingly happy plot about a family going on vacation to Florida. However, the grandmother does not listen to her son about taking her cat on the trip and her disobedience ultimately leads to all of their deaths. The author changes the tone of the story at the end when the family gets into a wreck and faces a gruesome death by a crazed armed killer on the loose (O’Connor#).
In “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” Flannery O’Connor creates a story where the roles of good and evil blend together. In the short story, a family in the rural South gets caught up with a criminal named the Misfit after their wreck and they end up getting murdered. The clash between the grandmother and the Misfit highlights the religious aspects of the story and also O’Connor’s beliefs. Her stylistic traits of violence, distortion, and religion are used to convey a corrupt world that needs salvation. O’Connor’s trait of violence is used throughout to reveal the corrupt and criminal world that emanates the need for salvation.
In the 1953 short story titled “A Good Man is Hard to Find” by Flannery O’Connor, readers are given a glimpse of what the end of the story may look like through use of foreshadowing, symbolism, and other literary techniques. Although the story looks to be an innocent story of a family who travels to Florida for vacation at the start of it, readers soon find out that the story has a darker twist to it. This family trip turns violent and this gruesome ending can easily represent the violence taking place in America during the time this story was written by O’Connor and even today. The short story starts off with a family of six- parents, a grandmother, and three children-
Growing up, Wes did not have anyone else to look up to besides his older brother Tony, that was involved in