Preview

George Barton's Death

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
984 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
George Barton's Death
Death is usually a word most people never want to think or talk about. But death is something that's always going to be there no matter what, it’s inevitable and part of our human life cycle. The worst way a person can die is alone. When people imagine a funeral they usually picture people, wearing black, crying for the person being buried. People never imagine a person being alone when they pass away with no one there to claim their body. Nobody wants to die alone, they want to be remembered. Imagine what it was like for George Bell to have no one there for him in, “The Lonely Death of George Bell” by N. R. Kleinfield. In this story, Kleinfield talks about the death of George Bell. Kleinfield states George Bell died in his apartment …show more content…
The process wasn’t easy, since they found no one to take care of funeral arrangements or claim his assets. Most of the story was about people trying to piece together George’s life. I found it somewhat interesting to get to read what people did to find information on George’s life. I just didn’t see the need for the author to fully explain, in detail, the whole process they did in order to figure out who George Bell was. I felt like the whole process was too much and at times a bit boring. Being completely honest I didn’t care much about the process, but I have to admit I never thought a body had to go through all this when there was no one to claim it. Throughout the whole story, I just wanted to know about George and why he ended up alone with no …show more content…
For me, it was surprising to find out George was a prankster who liked to mess around with people. In the story he was always portrayed as a loner with no friends, but he was actually someone who was fun to be around. I wonder what made him change to not wanting anyone in his life. For example, in the book it talks about how Higginbotham would try calling him and sending letters, but none of those things worked to get George to speak to him (290). Even though it never states why George drifted apart from his friends, we were told George was a hoarder. Maybe he was too embarrassed of people figuring it out, which caused him to push people away. Whatever the case was, people in his past life “found him difficult to crack open” (Kleinfield 288). Even Frank, who was George’s friend for fifteen years, didn’t really know

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Summary: The Pact

    • 488 Words
    • 2 Pages

    divorced when George was a toddler and after that he saw his dad a couple times here and there but never really formed a relationship with him. Ella was a strong independent woman who was hardworking and did what she needed to for her family, although she struggled she never put that pressure on her kids. Four years later she married Heyward Mack. Even though he was George’s stepdad they never had an emotional connection or anything really he just did for him what he needed to and not much more. After being married to Ella for six years George and his brother Garland came home one day to find out that He yward had packed up and left them. George never really knew what it was like to have a father and son connection because he had no real connection with his own father or his stepdad. It wasn't until he met his friends dad that he felt that. His friend Shahid Jr. who he became close friends with introduced him to his father Shahid Jackson and he really made an impact on George. He treated and looked after George as one of his own and he believed in him more than he believed in himself. And as for school his mother was too busy with work to really be as…

    • 488 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ‘Get yo hands out my pocket”, one of the young men exclaimed. A scuffle followed and I heard Brother Malcom say “Be cool, Be Calm and then the sound of gunfire rang through the ballroom. I looked toward the stage to see brother Malcom falling backwards cover in blood. The sound of gunfire and the screams from the spectators all seemed to dissolve around me as I watched the symbol of our hope laying upon the floor bleeding. As I snapped myself out of this horrid trance. I noticed the guards mercilessly beating a man until the Police came and saved him. I noticed other people still in shock watching as the paramedics took Brother Malcom out on a gurney and my hope was reignited when I heard a woman say ‘He’s alive, He’s still breathing”. He was taken across the street to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, where he was later pronounced…

    • 678 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Scarlet Ibis

    • 368 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The worst deaths are the one where you are alone and it’s a slow miserable process!…

    • 368 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    omam notes Essay Example

    • 1640 Words
    • 7 Pages

    (a) Extract : Ch. 2 ‘The boss turned to George. […] I’d shoot myself.’ Look closely at how George speaks and behaves here. What does it reveal about his character?…

    • 1640 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    George Baily, a person who tries to do good to everyone. Carrying a massive responsibility in his shoulders as he tries to prevent Mr. Potter from taking over the entire city. Even though he aspires to do other things, his father’s company is a prevention. He does a good job keeping it up and running, but not everything goes as planned and can put someone in a difficult position. One day his uncle goes to deposit money and loses it, as it lands in the wrong hands of Mr. Potter and keeps it. As he begins to think how he may end up in jail, how the business will collapse, how Mr. Potter will take over and how he will lose everything including his family. As he also begins to think that maybe his family is better off without him, that his death would solve all the problems. Having his mind wrapped up with all these thoughts George contemplates suicide since he…

    • 579 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    George is also never developed in the story. He feels greatly burdened by the responsibility of caring for Lennie. On page 7, he says, "I could get along so easy and nice if I didn't have you on my tail." George almost wishes that he could lead a normal life; not the one he's living now. This mindset of wishing for more than he has continues throughout the novel.…

    • 1553 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    After doing some easy research on the internet, I was able to visualize the story better. Especially now that I know the structure of the brain, I could really picture it in my head where Greg’s brain tumor was located and what parts of the brain was destroyed. Instead of reading words that are void of meanings to me, I now understand the different parts of the brain and their individual functions as…

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    George was a gangster from the prohibition era of the United States. He got his nick name from his favorite weapon, the Thompson submachine gun. When He was young he took up being a gangster as he needed to support his family and being a cab driver wasn't cutting it. George's bank robberies and crime sprees soon made him public enemy number one. He kidnapped Charles Kelly, who was a oil man and requested a $200,000 dollar ransom. George was arrested after state hoping and trying to elude the authorities. In 1934 he was put into Alcatraz and was reported about boasting about all the crime he never even did. He took a job within the prison system and an altar boy in the chapel. It was reported that it seemed that George felt remorse for what he did. Maybe because it got him locked up, or maybe he actually felt bad about what he did. George was sent to Leavenworth in 1951. While in Leavenworth George died of a heart attack in…

    • 1295 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    “Death is more universal than life; everyone dies, but not everyone lives,” quoted by Alan Sachs. Death is a part of everyone and touches everyone’s lives a little differently. It is a topic is that is usually followed by forms of sadness from the people associated with the person who passes away. What death is considered would be the end of someone’s life; they stop breathing and their body stops working. Death can come unexpectedly, it can be anticipated, but it is never easy. Due to many adults having a difficult time accepting death, they feel that the topic of death is too hard for children to understand; they believe the children should be kept uninformed. In Literature for Children A Short Introduction, Author David Russell explains…

    • 1843 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many of the characters in OMAM admit to suffering from profound loneliness and lost dreams. This is perhaps most effectively delivered through George. At the end of the novel Lennie accidentally kills the wife of the boss' son while trying to comfort her. Although Lennie is afraid George will be angry and flees. The ranch hands rightly guess the culprit and they set out to find and kill him. As George realizes what Lennie has done, the painful mission that he must undertake becomes clear to him, a mission that will cause him great grief and inner conflict. George knows that the murder of this girl could not be left unaddressed. Even if turning Lennie over to the police was a realistic option, being separated from George would have destabilized Lennie to a point that could have resulted in even greater tragedy. This internal conflict ripped George up inside, debating the right thing to do. It was more…

    • 1891 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    A good death

    • 2309 Words
    • 8 Pages

    “Everyone knows they’re going to die but nobody believes it. If we did, we would do things differently.”…

    • 2309 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Life as a House

    • 378 Words
    • 2 Pages

    George Monroe is a lonely and sad man. Divorced for ten years, he lives alone on the Southern California coast with his pet dog in the same run down shack he has lived in for twenty-five years, the shack which his father passed down to him. In the intervening years, ostentatious houses have sprung up around him. He's been at the same architectural firm for twenty years in a job he hates, which primarily consists of building scale models. On the day that he is fired from his job, he is diagnosed with an advanced case of terminal cancer, which he chooses not to disclose to his family. In many ways, this day is the happiest of his recent life in that he decides to spend what little time he has left doing what he really wants to do, namely build a house he can call his own to replace the shack. He also wants his rebellious sixteen year old son, Sam Monroe, to live with him for the summer, hopefully not only to help in the house construction, but for the two to reconnect as a family. Getting Sam to do any of it will not be an easy task as Sam, who has embarked on some self-destructive behavior, would rather do anything than spend time with his family, which also includes his mother Robin Kimball, her wealthy but emotionally unaffectionate husband Peter Kimball, and their adolescent children. In Sam, George sees an unhappy person in every aspect of his life, much like George was himself before that fateful day. What Sam decides to do for the summer may consider Alyssa Beck, his pretty classmate and George's next door neighbor. Through the process, George also reconnects with Robin, who admits that she's made some pretty bad decisions in her life. He may not want that reconnection to go too far considering his health. Ultimately George has much to do to complete all he wants before he dies. "Life as a House" offers audiences a chance to cry, laugh, and - at times - cringe at its harsh portrayal of a fractured family.…

    • 378 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    However, in the novel it is not really him who committed all those sins, but rather a nameless boy. (Martha: “…In spite of something funny in his past… which Georgie boy here turned into … a novel all about a naughty boy child … who killed his father and mother dead.” (Act 2)) This action (turning reality into a fictional novel) has fear of reality written all over it; George is running from the horrible reality of his past as well as the dismal situation he finds himself in in the present. At the end of Act 2, George even turns the reality of the “chiming” Honey continuously referred to as the news that his son had died, rather than what it really was (a product of Martha and Nick “necking”, thus hurting Georges’ sacred dignity). This version of altering reality ends up being counter-productive, for George’s action ultimately forces himself and Martha to come to terms with…

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Lrp Guide

    • 2699 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Death is an aspect of life that is not only inevitable but also painful, especially…

    • 2699 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    At that very moment he recognized the woman. He couldn’t believe his eyes. She had been murdered two years ago in one of the toilets of the company. As petrified as imaginable, he left the office running and sweating copiously. He could feel the woman’s foot steps behind him. He was about to faint when he met one of the watchmen of the building coming towards him with a lantern because he had heard some strange noise. George could hear no one following him anymore and in the end he realized he was safe.…

    • 346 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays

Related Topics