Monday, December 14, 2009

In Cold Blood

This book proves to show that Capote is a very interesting and creative individual. I loved the instant spark he had to write about the Clutter's when he heard of the murders the very first time. He went straight to the source, and became part of Holcomb's life for months, without taking no for an answer. Capote talked to everyone, even the murderers! He did not leave until the story was finished, and that to me shows passion and dedication in writing. To top it all off, he started a brand new genre to write this book!

I am interested in the story, and want to know what happens next. However when the book goes into great detail about how things were, it gets kind of tedious. I just want to know what happens!! Not all of it is boring. I love the creepy thoughts Capote gives readers when the Clutters are still alive. He states the last time that Nancy will ever answer the phone. As well as Mr. Clutter's last walk home from work. "Then, touching the brim of his cap, he headed for home and the day's work, unaware that it would be the last"(13). It's spine-chilling! I like reading the dialogue because the story seems to move a little faster. It's easy to sense that the Holcomb residents are uneasy. They are still in shock over what happened. "'Funny, but you know, Bess? I'll bet that he wasn't afraid. I mean, however it happened, I'll bet right up to the last he didn't believe it would. Because it couldn't. Not to him'"(117). The scariest part of the book is that it's a true story. It only proves to show that bad things happen, and they can happen anywhere.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Salinger's Life and Catcher

Like Holden, Jerome David Salinger was raised in a wealthy home, with not so loving parents. The article I read stated that Salinger's grandparents disapproved of his parent's marriage, and it crumbled after that. Salinger had a horrible relationship with his father. He hated his father so much that he did not attend his funeral. Holden was unable to attend Allie's funeral, but he wanted to be there. Holden felt bad for not being there. Maybe Salinger feels guilty for not being at his father's funeral, and that's why he incorporated that situation in his book The Catcher in the Rye. The book is set in New York City, where Salinger was raised. And like Holden, Salinger was kicked out of a prep school. His parents did not tolerate this, and sent him to Valley Forge Military Academy for a few years. He did go to Europe and fought. While in Europe, he also met Ernest Hemingway, and a couple other famous writers. Holden and Salinger enjoy reading, and I feel they share the same view of how they feel about the authors. "What really knocks me out is a book that, when you're all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up whenever you felt like it"(18). Maybe Hemingway was a good friend to Salinger. Neither Holden or Salinger can keep a stable relationship. Salinger had a few short marriages, but nothing serious. And I think they share the same view on religion. They were both raised as a Catholic, but they left that and searched for something else. Neither of them found a strong belief. The Catcher in the Rye seems like Salinger's personal diary, and he allowed the world to read it. Salinger went through some crazy things as a young adult, and maybe he felt that he should let his story be heard for other young adults who feel lost, or refuse to grow up, as if to reassure them that they are not the only ones who feel the way they do.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

What Makes Holden a Typical Teen?

Holden is an interesting individual. He is a typical teen, but he is very unique at the same time. First off, his mouth definitely makes him sound like a teen. It drives me crazy! Gosh, he needs to bulk up on his vocabulary, or something! Like many teens, Holden gets nervous over lots of things. He especially gets nervous when Stradlater is getting ready for his date with Jane. "I pulled the peak of my hunting hat around to the front all of a sudden, for a change. I was getting sort of nervous, all of a sudden. I'm quite the nervous guy"(34). Holden cares about Jane all throughout the book. One unique thing about Holden is how he treats for women. Unlike other guys, Holden gives them respect, and cares about what they think. He talks about how much it kills him how guys like Stradlater take advantage to girls. Holden talks about it a little before the prostitute comes to his room. "The thing is, most of the time when you're coming pretty close to doing it with a girl-a girl that isn't a prostitute or anything-she keeps telling you to stop. The trouble with me is, I stop. Most guys don't"(92). One good quality that Holden has is that he is not shy to speak what he believes. He tells the audience that he is atheist, and how he hates phonies. Holden is not hypocritical, he is not a phony. With Holden, what you see is who he is, minus whatever you don't ask him to share.
Holden is sad because he is growing up. He is afraid of the adult world, and misses the innocence and honesty of childhood. If things could be his way, he would stay a child forever. The metaphor in the book Catcher in the Rye is a rye field. Children are in the field and can't see over the rye. When the children grow and see over the rye, they are exposed to adulthood, which is just as good as death, or a fatal fall off a cliff. If Holden could, he would sweep down and save all those children before they fall. Holden never had a good childhood, and that did not prepare himself for adulthood. I think he just wants to start over, and that's why he does stupid things throughout the book. He's too exposed to adulthood to go back to childhood, yet he is not ready for adulthood.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Reaction to Film

There were some minor differences in the film from the book, however, i felt I got a much better idea of what the characters were like in the film than from reading the book. I became more interested in the film than the book, and that does not happen often! Cheswick stood out much more in the film to me. His character portrayed in the film is the kind of character that drives me absolutely crazy with his questioning and complaining.
At the same time, however, the film completely left out Cheswick's death. I always get ticked off when films do not follow the book!
I can see why Ken Kesey would not be pleased with this film. First off, the film was not narrated in Chief's point of view, like the book. So many beautiful descriptions were depicted in the book that there's no way the film would be able to pick them up. One is the description of the hospital, and Big Nurse being a work of machinery. "So she really lets herself go and her painted smile twists, stretches to an open snarl, and she blows up bigger and bigger, big as a tractor, so big I can smell the machinery inside the way you smell a motor pulling too big a load"(11). Another metaphor not mentioned in the film was the fog that hides chief from the rest of the patients and Big Nurse, the fog made him invisible. The fog was a main element, and would be good to put in the film.
In the book, I understood how the title got it's name through the nursery rhyme Chief learned from his grandmother. I think that anyone who watched the movie without reading the book would probably question why the title is about a cuckoo's nest. I know I would be curious! That would have been good to mention in the movie as well.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Post #1 McMurphy vs. Big Nurse

From the moment McMurphy first entered the hospital, it was obvious that he was not like the other patients. McMurphy is definitely trouble for this environment, what with his gabling habits, and especially in the beginning because he knows nothing about Big Nurse and her routine.
Big Nurse is like cold iron. In the book, Chief describes Big Nurse in the beginning when she is entering the hospital. Chief knew it was her by the slow and quiet way she turned the key, and he resembles her bag to a toolbox. "...there's no compact or lipstick or woman stuff, she's got that bag full of a thousand parts she aims to use in her duties today-wheels and gears, cogs polished to a hard glitter, tiny pills that gleam like porcelain, needles, forceps, watchmakers pliers, rolls of copper wire..."(10). Big Nurse runs the hospital like a machine when it comes to her routine. Everyone in the hospital must follow Big Nurse's routine. If anything falls out of routine, the machine that Big Nurse built up falls apart; people get hurt and upset. Eventually the routine goes back to fully functioning.
To some patients Big Nurse's routine is very helpful. The routine can give the patients a safe feeling. They know that if they stick with the routine, then they can go on with their lives without any troubles. These patients do not have to make their own decisions, or be afraid of the unexpected. Every day is the same thing from morning to evening.
McMurphy may be trouble, but he is full of life, which is something that the other patients are severely lacking. For the patients who stay at the hospital voluntarily could afford to get a little nudge from McMurphy. He can show them what the world is like outside of the hospital. So in a way, McMurphy can help some patients more than Big Nurse can.
This will be an interesting battle! Big Nurse is tough and has had power in the hospital for years, but McMurphy is fully dedicated to shutting Big Nurse's machine down. "'Bug her till she comes apart at those neat little seams, and shows, just one time, she ain't so unbeatable as you think'"(69). I hope McMurphy can shut Big Nurse down enough to get the voluntary patients out of the hospital.