The Glass Castle by: Jeannette Walls
Jeannette Walls has a very rough childhood. To living in a RV to a car to a house, to a shack that's crumbling apart. She has a drunk as a father and a mother with some psychological issues making them useless as parents. Jeannette also has a brother and two sisters. The brother is named Brian the sisters are named Lori and Maureen. Brian, Lori, and Jeannette are close and really trust each other and help each other get through their childhood. Maureen is rarely even with her family she's mostly at friends houses or she stays at other people's houses.
Though Jeannette goes through a lot of hard times in her childhood. She needs to learn how to mostly survive on her own, get by on little to nothing. Everywhere she went she learns how to feed herself when there was no food around, keep warm, and help her family as much as she could. In doing this she's becoming very responsible and also she becomes very self sufficient. She's doing very well in school and even gets a job to pay for food for her family, when her parents wouldn't. She makes a budget to plan her spending and get the most out of her money. But it's her father who takes a big fraction of her budget to go and gamble or scam drunks.
…show more content…
Her family would sometimes provide food, shelter, and clothes when they had the money, but it was never really how a child should be cared for. She needed to learn how to grow up and quickly, in order to make her life better so after she arrived at Welch she started doing extra curricular activities after school in order to stay longer to avoid going home. She also got a job to help pay for food because her mother quit her job and Rex didn't maintain a steady flow of money, after getting her job she created a
Jeannette 's relationship with her siblings is a kind and close relationship. For example, when they lived in Phoenix she was always did everything with Brain. While with lori they were sort of distant from each other, but after Lori got her glasses they seemed to do a lot of things together. Also, when they were in Welch they played in the forest toghther and help when they needed it. This is seen when Lori starts to plan to go to new york, and they all start to save up so she can go.
Near the beginning of Jeannette Wall’s memoir The Glass Castle, she recalls how she was taught to swim. Her family already struggled with money, moving around constantly, and she had grown to be independent. As she learns to swim, her father employs a concerning strategy: letting her sink and nearly drown before saving her for just a moment, then throwing her back into the water. Jeannette eventually catches on, realizing it’s more harmful to let him save her: “And so, rather than reaching for Dad’s hands, I tried to get away from them…and finally, I was able to propel myself beyond his grasp.”
Close Reading: St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves Excerpt: “… Not great not terrible, solidly middle of the pack… I probably could have vied with Jeanette for the number-one spot… This wasn’t like the woods, where you had to be your fastest…self. Different sorts of calculations were required to survive...” (Russell 233).
There are times in summer in which a student wonder’s around doing nothing. Giving a rising senior a book such as The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls will give them an academic activity during their summer break. The vocabulary in The Glass Castle, presents an opportunity for rising seniors to be actively learning in the summer. The words in the book will make the reader engage to new vocabulary. Together with a great plot of rags to riches, Jeannette Walls will captivate any reader not only rising seniors.
The memoir, The Glass Castle, is about a family that undergoes many hardships and yet remains unique and dysfunctional through it all. It is told through the eyes of young Jeannette Walls who recalls her childhood, and growing up in the special scenario that she did. Certain aspects are capitalized throughout the memoir such as the theme, the cultural experiences, and the understanding of historical accounts. As Jeannette Walls once said, “Life is a drama full of tragedy and comedy. You should learn to enjoy the comic episodes a little more.”
In the story “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” by Karen Russell there is a clear tone present through the whole reading. The tone in this story is the desire to be successful. The wolf girls are taken to St. Lucy’s so they can successfully be trained on how to be civilized. Their families have sent them away so they can make a better life for themselves. The parents of the girls were not accepted by the locals because of they are unable to act civilized.
She went to school before her father pulled her out during farming season, to help out. Education was a low priority for the family. Doss was
Jeannette Walls is living in her car with her family for most of the story. She travels with her Mom, Dad, brother and her sister. They’re a very nomadic family and they travel all over the world hiding from the cops. Stealing and fighting for what she believes in becomes part of her everyday life with her dysfunctional family. She has to stand up for herself but hide her doings to avoid getting caught.
The Walls family lived a nomadic lifestyle, never staying in one sport for long. Each location, whether Phoenix, Las Vegas or others, impacted their life in important ways. The learned many life lessons along the way. However, not every location had the same lasting impact. In the memoir, The Glass Castle, Jeanette Walls, the author, was most influenced by her time in Battle Mountain, as indicated by her sense of home and the harsher life she experience there.
Jeannette and her siblings depend on each other like when Jeannette and Brian pair together when faced by bullies at school. Maureen exists as a sort of “black sheep” in the family because not only does she not have red hair, but she seldom spends time with the family and instead relies on others to care for her. That’s why Jeannette believes Maureen is in need of more protection than the rest of her siblings. Considering the neglect and abuse she suffered. I was extremely surprised that she did remain somewhat close to her parents.
In The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, it tells about how the Walls family move to different desert towns, settling in for as long as their father, Rex, can hold a job. However, his perspective of the state and society, and his alcoholism led them to move frequently. The children - Lori, Jeannette, Brian, and little Maureen- experiences unusual childhood, where they travel like nomads to find new money source. This lead to the theme, sometimes you can be mature and responsible at a very young age. The theme is developed by how Jeannette learns how to take care of herself and her younger siblings, and the way her parent taught her.
Though you come from a troubled, distraught childhood it only makes you stronger and wiser in adulthood. Through Jeanette 's parents ignorance, her persistence, and resilience are what she used to become strong mentally and successful. You are either successful or you are not, your background or childhood doesn 't determine or limit your success. All it does is determine how hard and how much you have to work for it.
A balance between a enriching intellectual environment and comfortable living conditions is what all families, especially parents want. This is a constant struggle in the Glass Castle because of the Walls poor living condition, but eagerness to explore and adventure the world. Rex and Rosemary Walls, parents of Lori, Jeannette, Brian, and Maureen, obviously take an exploratory and learning environment over a comforting living space. Although living in rough conditions, which leads to bullying, poverty, I believe that it was more important that the Walls created circumstances for most of the children to explore and enjoy learning. Jeannette Walls, the author and the narrator throughout the book, tells a story about her life from when she was
The family grew as Phoebe sister meets love of her life. Phoebe later goes back to college for psychology and meeting her future husband. Later getting married she gets job as top columnists for a newspaper giving advice using her degree. Chaos starts to ensue as Phoebe realizes her husband pushing her away from her family. Later getting a divorce and starts dating again trying to find love her.
Her financial situation as a child was rough at a very early age. In “The