Friday, November 23, 2007

Book Review

The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls, is a story of struggletosurvive in poverty. Jeannette Walls was the daughter of Rex and Rose Mary. She also had two sisters and a brother. Rex and Rose Mary's way of living ruined her childhood, but I think that it helped her in the long run to become a stronger person. Jeannette pretty much had to fend for herself as a child because her father was a drunk and her mother did not want the responsiblity of caring for a family. When her father was sober, though, he did teach them a lot about a number of different things, but mostly he brought out their imagination. They never really stayed in one place, they were always moving around. The kids all had to deal with bullies at school and people looking down upon them because they did not have nice clothes, and they could not always take showers. Rex and Mary Walls did not care what others thought of them. They enjoyed living the way that they were. They tried to teach their kids to ignore people who looked down on them and not let it bother them, but I could tell that Jeannette and the rest of the kids really did want a better life.
They finally find the will, and the money, to leave their old life, and start a new one for themselves. The Walls kids all looked after one another and always stuck together. They truly cared about each other very much. Although Jeannette's parents did not give her a great life as a child, she talks about them in the story with such affection, and she does make it hard at times for the reader to hate her father or her mother for what they did.
I really love this story. I was hooked from the first page. It kept me guessing at what great adventure they were going to go on next throughout the whole book. At times, it was hard to believe that all of the events in the story truly did happen. I really like how the story was told all in the child's voice. It is much more effective that way because it makes the reader be able to really feel what Jeannette was feeling as a kid. The story also gives the reader a great sence of the setting.
I liked the kids, but I did not like Rex and Mary. Rex was just a drunken jerk most of the time who was, for the most part, the reason for the problems that the family had. When he was sober, he did inspire the kids to use their imagination, and he taught them a lot, but when he was drunk, which was most of the time, he was just destructive. The kids had to care for themselves. They needed to find ways be obtain food and to get clothes and money. They stuck together and got through it though. Having a strong opinion of the characters in the book makes it more interesting to read.
This was just an amazing book, and the whole time I was reading it I never wanted to put it down. It just really makes you feel like you are in the story, and it gives the reader a great understanding of what the Walls children had to go through.

1 comment:

Ms. H said...

I agree that Jeanette's description of her father made it hard to hate him--even though sometimes he seemed to deserve it.