John
Updike’s A&P reminds of a very modern-day story of one hero refusing to be
a corporate slave. Sammy, the main character and the narrator, is working the
cash register, seemingly minding his own business. So does the 22-year-old
Stokesie, a married guy with two kids. When four beauties shuffle into the
store in bathing suits, the young salespeople’s lives brighten up. They both
realize that they live lives of quiet desperation in that store, following
orders from dull and boorish people, serving crowds of “sheep,” and getting an
occasional “witch” who watches the cash register’s every ring. So, when Lengel
scolds the young ladies for coming in in their bathing suits, that is about
enough for Sammy. He seems like he had been contemplating quitting anyway, and
this incident was just the last straw, because the decision comes very easy and
quickly to him. When he goes out into the parking lot, he can see no girls,
because they are gone. Of course, he hopes they would be there. But there is
only a married couple with noisy kids. However, Sammy does not regret his
decision. He simply feels that he has gone against the whole world, because he
says, “and my stomach kind of fell as I felt how hard the world was going to be
to me hereafter.” This is a story of a kid who has the guts to go against
corporate slavery but does not know yet that it is perfectly all right to do
so, even in 1961, when the story was written.
Monday, November 24, 2014
Monday, November 10, 2014
"A Worn Path": Review
Eudora Welty’s “A Worn Path” is a heartwarming but dramatic story of a rather old African-American lady named Phoenix Jackson who is on a journey from her hometown to Natchez, where she receives a medicine for her grandson twice every year. Welty masterfully dramatizes the journey, the description of which takes up about ninety percent of the narrative. Phoenix encounters many obstacles on the way, such as a ravine, a corn field that seems to her like a maze because of her failing eyesight, wild animals, and even a young white hunter who points his gun at her. But she is unafraid, truly an example of a human being triumphant over her circumstances. She talks to all the inanimate obstacles as if they were alive, befriending them yet warning them that she is unafraid. All throughout the journey the reader is kept in suspense about the outcome and fears the worst, especially when the young hunter essentially threatens her life. The story might be set in the time of Lynchings, and it is unclear if that danger hangs over Phoenix. Therefore, the reader is greatly relieved to find that Phoenix not only succeeds in reaching the destination but manages to earn a whole dime in the process to buy her grandson a pinwheel. This is a story of a great will of an incredible human being on a quest.
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