Preview

Summary Of Everything Stuck To By Raymond Carter

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
462 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary Of Everything Stuck To By Raymond Carter
In Everything Stuck to is a fictitious frame story written by Raymond Carter. The story focuses mainly on a small family of three and goes over many topics such as identity, commitment, and responsibility. In the beginning of the story, a woman wants to know what it was like when she was a kid. She is unnamed, along with the rest of the main character in the story, causing an unknown identity, and wants to know more about when she was younger, maybe to help her sense of identity. The father in the story calls Carl, a friend he hunts with, which may be an attempt of the father trying to live like he did before he got married and had a child. The story says that the father was a little bit in love with his wife’s sisters, Sally and Betsy, indicating he was not fully committed to his wife. It was even said if he weren’t with the mother, he would go for Sally. The story shows that he is still not as mature and committed as he should be to his family. …show more content…
When the baby is often crying, waking them both up, he still thinks about going hunting the next day. When it is still happening by morning, he begins to get dressed, and the wife asks where he is going. After he tells her, she tells him she doesn’t think he should go, that she doesn’t want to be left alone. He tells her that they made plans, but she doesn’t care. She tells him that she’s his wife and that was his baby, signaling to him that he has responsibilities. He insists on going, and she makes him choose between the two and Carl. He grabs his gear and walks out the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    2. What might have happened for Carl to refer to it as “the sad vegie patch”? (p7)…

    • 3209 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Carl has since grown up into a resentful son toward his father, because at some point he found out about his lustful affair. Carol then revels unto his father Barden that he knows and doesn’t respect him for being unfaithful to his mother. Barden asked Carl to forgive him, but Carl couldn’t it seems to let go that his preacher father was acting of flesh and not as a clergyman. Barden not only ask his son Carl for forgiveness but he also asks God. Time and time again Barden goes back and does the same thing that he asked to be forgiven for previously. Barden is having an affair with Louise whom is married as well. So not only is Barden committing adultery, Louise is doing the same. Louise not only has a husband she has three daughters.…

    • 1194 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The father begins spending less and less time at home, resulting in Dave getting even more beatings from his mother because she is blaming him for the issues in her marriage. That summer the family goes on a vacation and it seems as if Dave and his mother are getting along better until one day he is playing with his brothers and she scolds him for being too loud and is not allowed to go with them to the slide. Dave's mother punishes him even further by taking a dirty diaper and smearing it in his face, trying to get him to eat it. When he refuses she hits him and then the abuse stops long enough for her to tend to the baby and then she rubs another dirty diaper into Dave's face and tells him again to eat it. Just in time, the family returns and the abuse stops with his mother throwing a washcloth at him to clean himself up and then forces him to sit in the corner for the remainder of the night. The next chapter has Dave's father coming home even less, but when he does he helps Dave to wash the dishes. When his mother scolds his father saying the boy should not be helped, Dave's father becomes rarely seen at…

    • 1633 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    She’s raising two kids, working, and still participates in family chores at home. But Bartels does the same. Since they had children, he recalls having to give up several things, these including drinking beer and ‘guy’s night out. This came with the territory, but what else came with the territory, he was not expecting. His wife begins to take her anger out on him, letting her frustrations of the children out on her husband. With an accusing “your son” or “your daughter” implying she had nothing to do with their behavior, Bartels found himself at his wits’ end.…

    • 556 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The book “Hooked” by Dr Lonny Shavelson is a fascinating read regarding the rehabilitation of 5 individuals (Mike, Darlene, Crystal, Darrell, and Glenda) dealing with heroin, meth, crack, and alcohol abuse. In the memoir, Dr Shavelson follows these 5 participants through their everyday dealings with the network of recovery facilities in San Francisco during the “open-door” policy implemented in the 1990’s, allowing addicts to seek treatment if they wanted. From what I gather, he noticed the chaotic nature of these participants replicated and correlated the with chaotic nature of the rehabilitation system in San Francisco during that time. In the following paragraphs, I will attempt to explain the issues related to alcohol and substance abuse…

    • 594 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    At this time Carl was working with this step-father at a trucking company. He had a child. He…

    • 1102 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    The story opens with its first apparent imagery of the couple ordering beer while waiting for the train. As the man and woman begin their dialogue, the woman makes remarks about the distant hills which the train station is situated between. As they continue talking it becomes known that the woman is pregnant, and the man wants her to have an abortion. “What should we drink?” the girl asks. She has taken off her hat and put it on the table.” It’s pretty hot ,” the man say. “ Let’s drink beer”.………..”I wanted to try this new drink. That’s all we do, isn’t it- look at things and try new drinks.” the woman comments. The drinking of the beer represents the couple’s unusual recreational routine of hanging out together and not really having a serious relationship. This clearly shows that the girl is tired of doing the same thing and wants a chance of looking forward to something new, and her dissatisfaction with the relationship as a whole. Her intention at the present time is to raise this baby and have a family with him.…

    • 894 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The father has lost so much to this dark world, he now calls him and his sons home. The father lost his wife for she didn't want live in this new world, so she killed herself. “The woman: You can think of me as a faithless slut if you like. I've taken a new lover. He can give me what you cannot. The man:Death is not a lover”(mccarthy 29). The effects on the man after his wife's death strongly show later on in the book. The man and his son were walking, and pushing the cart when the man decided to sit…

    • 468 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The story tells about a chance meeting between a woman named Kathe Connor and a man named Lyle Carter. Kathe was a thirty-seven year old divorced woman. She lived her life routinely. She drove the same route “so frequently she has almost ceast to see her surroundings”(521). She was also very kind hearted and cared for others. Lyle Carter was a large, hard working man as described by Oates, “A big man in work clothes, torso like the trunk of a thick tree”(522). Contrary to his stature, he was a gentle, compassionate man. He, like Kathe, was divorced and set in his ways. He tells Kathe that “he’d become accustomed to being alone in this phase of his life”(526). Their chance meeting occurred when Kathe noticed something on the side of the road. She stopped to help this creature who ended up being a tiny newborn fawn. Lyle approached and almost hit Kathe’s car. He stopped and tried to help Kathe save the fawn.…

    • 496 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    So, at first you notice the man and the boy. There is a cup of spilled milk on the table, so maybe the man is frustrated because the boy made a mess. The man may have an anger problem from being an abused child himself and he snapped at the boy because he accidentally made a mess. Then in the background behind the man and the boy you notice three other individuals. Three people who are dressed the same who seem a little bit older than the last and are all wearing the same clothes. You then realize that it is the boy growing up and going through life ending in the same situation as the man.…

    • 694 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The one element that Godwin really hits on in the short story to strengthen the overall theme is the use of fairy tale aspect. At the beginning of the narrative, Godwin inserts a line before the actual story starts that reads, “Once upon a time there was a wife and mother one too many times” (Meyer 36). In this line, she is trying to put the point across to the reader that this short story will challenge the notion of what women desire. Godwin tries to portray that the wife in her story is not the normal wife and mother, like in most fairy tales. The wife in A Sorrowful Woman resembles the exact opposite of what women in fairy tales were portrayed as. In most fairy tales, the woman usually finds prince charming, gets married, has children and lives happily ever after. She desires to different and hopes for a changed role in society. The reader doesn’t know about the wife and husband’s life before their child’s birth, however some passages presume that she had a…

    • 1253 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    For example, the character Paul D is a character that falls in and out of the story. In the beginning of the book, Paul D temporarily stays with Sethe setting the tone that Paul D, Sethe, and Denver could all work together as a family. “The shadows of three people still held hands.” (Morrison 49) As explained in the quote, the three of them held hands via shadow when they went to the carnival and seemed like everything would work out in harmony, all until Beloved was brought into the picture and throws off the balance in the house. The importance of family is also explained when Denver, Beloved, and Sethe develop a relationship upon each other developing the concept of she is “mine”. “You are mine”,( repeated three times by each character)( Morrison217) A final example of love for family is the point in the book when Sethe killed Beloved for her own benefit to protect Beloved from being raised into…

    • 646 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Aunt Georgiana follows her new love Howard to only find hardships while losing the music that filled her life with joy. Clark begins telling us about Aunt Georgiana’s love Howard Carpenter by saying, “she kindled the callow fancy of the most idle and shiftless of village lads.” Cather begins with this to show us that this man is not one with much desire to succeed and make life easy for him or his family. Making this one of the poorer choices Georgiana has made. However, she developed “absurd and extravagant passions” for this young man that she could not avoid. So much that Aunt Georgiana could not get over this “inexplicable infatuation” for Howard and eloped with him. Aunt Georgiana has fallen in love with this man and has decided to sacrifice her love of music to pursue her love with him. After eloping they then moved to the Nebraska frontier as to avoid the criticism of her family and friends. Cather throws in the part about moving away to avoid criticism to show that others knew and tried to help Georgiana avoid this terrible sacrifice she would be making. Then Clark remembers back to when he lived with his aunt she seldom talked to him about music, and to her her martyrdom was not wholly sordid. This shows how she knows…

    • 953 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The speaker shows more disappointment with her father when she exclaims, "you are the pocket that was going to open" (17), then continues "and come up empty any friday" (18). This shows us how unreliable she thought her father was. The daughter compares her parents' marriage to an unfavorable unity: "you were eachother's bad bargain, not mine" (19). Shouldn't marriage be a happy and joyful union, not something that you can't stand?…

    • 370 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “Everything Stuck to Him " write by Raymond Carver, these are a theme of, commitment, identity, responsibility, maturity, decisions, and unity. Taken from What We Speak When We Speak about Love collection the story was a narrative in the third person by an unnamed storyteller and is a frame narrative (a story inside a story). It is also apparent that quite briefly on in the story Carver delves into the theme of identification. From the opening, the reader is not informed of any of the actors names (causing it to be tougher to form an identification), and more importantly, during the story the young girl’s parents, described as adults, but as children. Possibly because of their childhood, and inexperience Carver chooses not to give a level of capability on them. After all, they were, only…

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics