The narrator of T.C. Boyle 's "Greasy Lake" appears to be the ultimate rebel upon first glance. The unnamed main character goes out of his way to appear "bad" to his friends and anyone around him. The narrator explains that he wore leather jackets, drove his parents ' station wagon and drank gin and grape juice to produce the effect of being intimidating and cool to others. By the end of the story when the narrator has the chance to continue his false image of being a badass, he decides to take another route. I wanted to write about the narrator about Greasy Lake because I found him to be really pretentious and agravating. His character is shown when he says: "We were bad. We read Andre Gide and struck …show more content…
The narrator expresses character development when he says: "I wanted to get out of the car and retch, I wanted to go home to my parents ' house and crawl into bed." He then says that he felt like he was about to cry when she asks if they wanted to do drugs with the girl and her friend. In the end he didn 't stay with the girls which was something he would have done if he truly was as "bad" as he thought himself to …show more content…
In addition to the narrator’s pacifying silence, agreement is revealed in the form of a nonverbal action when he slips the “car in gear…creeping towards the highway" (Boyle 929). His answer is final and transformation is now complete. The “sheen of sun on the lake" represents a renewal of life’s opportunity, as well as a confirmation of it, for they have passed their first test (Boyle 929). Their moment of enlightened transformation has come, and they have taken stock in its message their transformation is now