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Character Analysis Of Johnny Cade In 'The Outsiders'

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Character Analysis Of Johnny Cade In 'The Outsiders'
Inna Lyvytska 10-23-13
The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton
Character Analysis Essay
Johnny Cade Ponyboy and his friends are caught in a hurricane of dramatic events that start after the night someone took it too far. After a couple of breath taking scenes, you race through the chapters in uncertainty. The events trip over each other in suspense that come to a jolting stop. In the book The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, the author writes an exhilarating
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Johnny can stay away from home for long periods of time and neither of his parents seem to care or notice. Even though Johnny has bad role models, he's tries to stand up and be a good person. We’ve never see him being mean or mistreating others. He even challenges his idol, Dallas, when he sees how uncomfortable Dallas was is making Cherry and Marcia at the movies on pages 24. To make things even worse, Johnny was brutally beaten by the Socs last spring and now lives in a constant state of fear. On top of that, he doesn't quite get enough to eat, he often sleeps outdoors, and is even contemplating suicide. After Johnny saved the children from the fire, he seems to be saying that he's come to terms with his death, because death was the price he had to pay to regain some of the innocence he'd lost. Being involved in so much violence, in some ways it probably made him feel pure. He would prefer to live, even though he's probably more scared to live than to die, because he can see that there is good in the world, and that he's been a part of it. Johnny is a remarkable young teenager that went about his daily life with great

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