The memoir entitled The Glass Castle, written by Jeannette Walls is a story of the eventful life Jeannette endured growing up with her three siblings and her parents. Jeannette lived a tough life, she was constantly moving, never had nice clothes to wear, and had to grow up faster than most children. The reason for the constant struggles in Jeannette’s life led back to her parents. Her father Rex Walls was outrageous, always making spur of the moment decisions which had taken a toll on the family as a whole. He was a severe alcoholic who made way too many promises he knew he couldn’t keep. Throughout the novel, the idea of the “Glass Castle” appears quite often. The Glass Castle is the house that Rex promised his kids he was going to build for them in the desert. He house was meant to be unlike any other, having glass walls, a glass staircase, and other technological advancements. The house is what kept Jeannette hoping that her life could turn around, that her father would finally give his children a stable life. Secretly Rex knew the Glass Castle would never be built, but he hoped that his children would still believe him, and keep giving him the reassurance he needed. To Jeannette the Glass Castle represents broken promises and to Rex is represents hope.…
The glass castle starts off in the present with Jeanette taking a taxi home and seeing her mother picking through a New York city dumpster. Jeanette returns to her middle class…
Throughout the book The Glass Castle, the author uses specific wording that makes the book unique.…
What makes his broken promise even worse is that he assaults Rosemary, the mom, in a violent fit of anger involving damages to the interior house and various shouting that terrifies the kids. This causes Jeannette to not only be disappointed by Rex, but to also not trust anymore of his promises, including the Glass Castle that he has yet to build or even start. Similarly, Jeannette would also grow to expect failure and lying from Rex that would eventually become true for Rosemary as well. After never bringing up the mere name of the Glass Castle in their entirety of living in Phoenix, papa Walls suggests that Jeannette and Brian build a hole for the foundation of the glass castle while living in Welch, an idea that the two gladly bring to reality. Despite their hardwork and devotion to the dream, the hole for the foundation is used as a garbage pit by the family to the anguish of Brian and Jeannette. Therefore, Jeannette no longer has faith in Rex, losing her belief in their dream of the glass castle. Similarly, Jeannette also grows even more distrusting of Rex, finally giving up in trying to believe his false…
What would it be like to grow up in a family where your dad is a drunk and your mom has the desperate urge to have no kids? Well, after reading The Glass Castle by Jeanette Walls, I can begin to comprehend. There are six members in the Walls family, Rex and Rosemary, parents, and Lori, Jeanette, Brain and Maureen, the children. Jeanette’s dad was an enormous player in the children’s childhood, when sober Rex was inspiring and charming, but when he drank he was very destructive. Therefore creating a terrible situation for the family to be in.…
prime example of her parents being one of the most embarrassing and sad things in her life. As…
The glass menagerie symbolizes the life of Laura. Laura grew up with a medical problem that included wearing braces on her legs. Laura felt different and outside the norm for other children. Her fragile body made her to become shy and private. Her only solace would be the collection of fragile glass animals. The oldest of her collection was the unicorn. The unicorn a beautiful and majestic creature, still having the visible "deformity" of the horn. The unicorn just did not quite fit in with the other horses. As Laura had the "deformity" of the braces, she did not seem to fit in. The addition of the other glass animals would give the unicorn friends, as Laura hoped to have.…
Do you think that too much change in a family can cause dysfunction? Well in the story “The Glass Castle” the author Jeanette Walls tells her story about how the changes in her family caused dysfunction amongst them. Through her experiences, she shows her readers how changes caused mainly by her father changed the lives of their family. In “The Glass Castle” the author uses simile, imagery, and flashback to show the message of change.…
The man had a very contemplative look, as he tried to decide whos side to take.…
After reading a vast majority of “The Glass Castle,” I have personally enjoyed reading Parts II and III the most. Throughout these two sections of the memoir, Jeannette was faced with an uphill battle each and everyday scarred by homelessness, poverty and starvation that has come to define this novel. Furthermore, the struggle experienced in these two parts allowed for Jeannette to truly reflect on her life and take control of her own destiny to realize that she needed to escape this lifelong rut that her family has been engulfed in since the day she was born. As a result, she became determined and unstoppable in her quest to rid herself of difficult circumstances and developed the strong characteristics that she is widely renowned for today.…
Jeannette changes over the course of the novel tremendously, and she uses acceptance to obtain the fact that life is not as successful as it could be. In the book The Glass Castle there are many instances where the family has a problem and they have to accept the fact that life is going to change. Doing this guides them through their hardships so that they are able to move on faster. Despite the fact that Jeannette has an unstable home and family, she accepts her drunk father, poor family, and her struggling mom, which shows that inner strength is essential to overcome dilemmas.…
A. Jeannette Walls, in her memoir The Glass Castle, demonstrates Erikson’s eight stages of development. Through the carefully recounted stories of her childhood and adolescence, we are able to trace her development from one stage to the next. While Walls struggles through some of the early developmental stages, she inevitably succeeds and has positive outcomes through adulthood. The memoir itself is not only the proof that she is successful and productive in middle adulthood, but the memoir may also have been part of her healing process. Writing is often a release and in writing her memoir and remembering her history, she may have been able to come to terms with her sad past. The memoir embodies both the proof that she has successfully graduated through Erickson’s stages of development while also being the reason that she is able to do so.…
In Throne of glass we are introduced to a lot of characters, of course, there are some that are more important than others. We get to follow these characters throughout the series, Celaena, Chaol, and Rowan. The book plays out in a medieval setting, set in the year of something, featuring old-style wooden houses, towns centered around a castle and so on. Except for the normal medieval setting, there is also magic which sadly doesn’t work in the city where the book mostly takes place in.…
“Several hours passed. … Suddenly, with a bang, we hit a huge pot hole and the back doors on the U-Haul flew open. … I wedged myself into a corner. It seemed like we’d have to ride it out. (Walls 49)” In this quote, Brian, Lori, Jeannette, and Maureen were put in the back of a U-Haul truck while leaving Blythe for Battle Mountain. He is irresponsible because his children almost flew out of a U-Haul truck going at highway speeds. Even though the kids were trying to alert their parents, Rex (and Rosemary) are unaware of this. Despite Rex’s negative qualities, he is also an idealist. “He carried around the blueprints for the Glass Castle wherever we went, and sometimes he pulled them out and let us work on the designs for our rooms. (Walls 25)” The Glass Castle is an idea of a perfect home and a perfect life that gives the family hope for a better future. Because Rex carries around these plans, he turns this idea into a possible reality. Although the family is homeless and hungry, their faith in this perfect future is what’s helping them survive, and Rex is giving them this…
When viewed in the exterior the shaft of the glass is supposed to balance the structure and maintain the house transparency. The towers corner casement windows open outward breaking down the box and making the corners vanish. All this blurs the lines between interior and exterior. With the windows like that it brings in the natural light in to the house and gives the viewer a better aspect of what surrounds Fallingwater. The first floor has a kitchen that has a Swedish AGA stove, red asphalt tiles, St. Charles metal cabinets, and a table. There is a sitting room for the servants which were built by the kitchen under…