Preview

The Glass Castle

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1131 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Glass Castle
Maureen is often forgotten throughout the entire story of The Glass Castle written by Jeannette Walls. We are very tragically reminded of Maureen’s presence when she stabs her own mother while living in New York. Reflecting back to the beginning of the story, we can see why Maureen has a mental breakdown. She is born into a world of violence, her parents fail to care for her, and she lives her entire childhood in neglect. The announcement that Mary is pregnant seems to be thrown into this story as if Walls forgot to include the part in the first place. Rex is holding a job at the gypsum mine and Mary makes sculptures out of the excess dust that Rex brings home. Just as it seems that things are taking a positive turn, it is told that Mary is pregnant. Usually a family (depending on the circumstance) is happy to be bringing a new baby into this world, but the Walls family sees this pregnancy as more of a burden. Not to mention, Rex and Mary cannot even decide on how far along in the pregnancy they are.
Before Maureen is even born, Rex and Mary get into a huge fight in the dessert. Mary exits the car in which the fight starts, and Rex chases after Mary. Walls writes, “[Rex] cornered [Mary] against some rocks…[Rex] dragged [Mary] back, legs flailing, and threw [Mary] into the car” (43). This occurrence is not justifiable in any case, but on top of this, Mary is pregnant and Maureen is put into great danger. Sadly, this proves that Maureen will be born into a very hostile environment.
Three months after Maureen is born, the Walls family is in their car when a police officer tries to pull them over for not having any brake lights. Rex says that if they do get pulled over, they would all be arrested because their car is not registered and does not have any insurance. This results in a car chase during which Maureen is literally tossed around. There is not actually a car seat for Maureen and her life is put in the hands of Jeannette. No newly born baby should be

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    On December 28, 2014; Rachel Melacon and Allen Coats gave birth to Olivia Coats. Unfortunately the doctor, who delivered her baby girl, by using forceps against the young couple’s wishes, caused unfixable injuries to the newborn. The couple puts blame for the death of their five-day old baby girl, Olivia Coats. However even though she requested to have a C- section, due to the size of the baby, Dr. George T. Backardjiev shut the idea down. Dr. Backardjiev told Rachel that it would leave a scar afterwards. He ended up using the forceps to deliver her baby girl. Dr. Backardjiev struggled with the forceps, “he even put his foot on the bed” to try and pull the baby out. “Dr. Backardjiev was turning and twisting, and she would never come out, he put the forceps one way and the other; when he touched the top and the side of the skull, we heard a pop, like clay cracking in pottery and heard her skull crush.” The medical staff told the couple their baby was alive; then Olivia was quickly transferred to “Children’s Memorial Harmann Hospital” in Houston Texas, it was at that hospital that they were informed that their daughter had suffered several fractures to her skull and spine; then on January 2nd Olivia Coats died. Angie coats told ABC News “we’re not mad at the hospital, this not their fault. It is one man’s fault, we only want justice for Olivia; we want the person responsible, which is the doctor. We don’t want the hospital being shunned.” The parents plan to sue Dr. Backardjiev for the death of their baby girl. The hospital administration and independent medical staff leadership are all committed in taking all necessary actions in understanding why this happened. The Houston Chronicle reports that the parents of Olivia Coats started a campaign to ban the use of forceps during delivery called “The Olivia Law.” The couple also started a fundraiser on Go Fund Me to raise awareness about the use of forceps explaining how damaging they can be, so far the…

    • 430 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Claudette was very scared to go to jail because she was pregnant with her son.Her parents bailed her out of jail the next few day’s.…

    • 520 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Come quick! Patrick's dead!” “He’s lying on the floor and i think he’s dead.” These two quotes support my theme is that she's now calling the police and there going to start asking questions about how it happened, who do u think did it, and what could have hit him that hard that he was to die. As the police arrived they began to ask her where she was when her husband Patrick had been killed. She told him she had ran to the grocery store to make dinner for patrick and she told them what grocer she had gotten the food from. The police left to ask the grocer if she seemed to be acting weird but of course he said no. She had rehearsed what she was going to say to him so many times she sounded just perfectly normal. “...Acted quite normal.. Very cheerful...wanted to give him a good supper..peas..cheesecake..impossible that she…” but actually she did. She had killed her husband over him leaving her for another women. She assumed that if they were to find out that she had kill him that they wouldn't kill her while she was pregnant with his baby. “In fact, it would be a relief. On the other hand, what about the child? What were the laws about murderers with unborn children? Did they kill them both-mother and child? Or did they wait until the tenth month? What did they do?” As she asked herself these questions as what was going to happen to her unborn child after she killed…

    • 1065 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Glass Castle, a memoir written by Jeannette Walls is an eye-opening look at the world of poverty that touches so many lives within in the United States. There are many reasons for poverty wheather they be out of consequence or one is simply born into it there are many reason for its occurance. The story of Jeannette Walls is not only inspiring but motivating as her climb from the depths poverty allow her to become the successful journalist and novelist she is today. Throughout her life there have been many struggles including her own father, Rex Walls, the finicial instability their family faces together, and the bullies Jeannette must face alone. She clearly outlines her own growth with her father throughout the novel and proves that with…

    • 1140 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Although she is of young age, Maureen has already seen so much of her parents reckless behavior. The first incident Maureen had recalled was when her father had lit fire to the Christmas tree. Rex Walls had been drunk at the time, Maureen had claimed and had thrown his lighter towards the tree which had immediately caught into flames ( ). Maureen had also shared another incident from the same day when her mother and father had gotten physical with one another. Maureen had described the fight as brutal and had even thought that her father was going to kill her mother. Instead Maureen stated that her parents had laughed and hugged in the end of their conflict ( ). It seems that what each child has most lacked when it comes to their needs was safety. Based on what Maslow stated, in both incidents Maureen's safety needs were not met. Instead she was exposed to abusive behavior and had almost been involved with a fire ( ). It is evident that both parents are completely incapable of meeting their children's safety needs as well as keeping them away from the wrong people. Both parents have done nothing but risk their children's lives over their own…

    • 1672 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Glass Castle, written by Jeannette Walls, is an autobiographical novel that shows how hard life can be when you have little to no money and highly deteriorated parents. During the whole memoir it shows how hard it is to live in poverty while at the same time trying to raise a family. The exposition of the novel is how having parents that cannot support their children because the lack of a stable income. The rising action is when Jeannette was in a taxi cab going to a party when she sees her mother digging through the trash can and feels embarrassed and tells the taxi driver to take her home. The major conflict in the novel is a man vs. man because Jeannette, her brother, and her sister are all affected by her parents not maintaining a job and the little money that they do earn goes to her father’s alcohol addiction. The climax of the novel is when Jeannette is able to stand up for herself after Rex blames her for making her mom angry. The falling action is when Jeannette makes the decision that she wants to move and live in New York city after her junior year of high school. Jeannette, Lori, and Brian all get a job and start working so that they could save money to get the tickets to move there. The denouement is when Jeannette achieves the goals she set in her life.…

    • 1155 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning Rex Walls is not the best person someone would know. Like when Jeanette had been burned and had to be rushed to the hospital so they could help her. “Dad hurried down the hall with me in his arms. A nurse yelled for us to stop…” (Walls 14) This shows that Rex was only thinking of what he wanted and not of Jeannette’s health. He had been careless and had not thought of all the things…

    • 508 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Due to his negligence and occasional endangerment of his children, many people dislike Rex Walls. They think he’s an awful, unfit parent. However, Rex was a loving, caring father who teaches his kids important values, with many positive parenting traits who just messes up from time to time. The reader can see how much Rex cares when he gives his kids stars for Christmas because he doesn’t have money for toys. Rex says, “Years from now, when all the junk [the other kids] got is broken and long forgotten, you’ll still have your stars” (Walls 41). Looking back at her childhood, Jeannette often says that Rex giving her Venus is one of her fondest memories.…

    • 701 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Glass Castle

    • 2757 Words
    • 12 Pages

    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.…

    • 2757 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    From her point of view, she comes from a precarious ethical and moral tightrope. When the hunger strike starts, Kathleen recognizes the agonizing dilemma that is waiting. As the-next-of kin, in case her son, Gerard, loses consciousness, it will be up to her to make a decision on whether or not he is given some food. When she agrees to have Gerald fed intravenously, she will violate his convictions. However, surely, there is no mother who can allow her son to die when she can make him…

    • 621 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rex Walls is an angry drunk, an irresponsible father, and a idealist. Although he has his moments of being a good father/husband, when he's drunk, all of that goes away. ““You crazy bitch!” Dad hollered. “Get your goddamn ass back in this car!”…We shot forward toward Mom, who screamed and jumped out of the way. Dad turned around and we went for her again. … Finally, Dad cornered Mom against some rocks. I was afraid he might smush her with the car, but instead he got out and dragged her back, legs flailing, and threw her into the car.” (Walls 43). In this scene of the book, Rex Walls chases down his wife after a minor argument about how long Rosemary Walls (his wife) has been pregnant with their daughter Lori. Prior to this, Rosemary claimed that she had been pregnant with Lori for 14 months and she left the car mid-argument. With Rex’s drunken…

    • 377 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Essays

    • 1406 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Russell, who was driving to her grandmother’s house at night, heard sirens and saw ambulances followed by police cruisers on their way to the hospital. When she arrived at her grandmother’s house, she saw her grandmother on the porch, putting on her coat to go somewhere. When Russell approached her grandmother, her grandmother told her, “Your mother has been in an accident” (Rosa and Eschholz 159). The accident occurred when Russell’s mother’s car was struck head-on by a drunk driver. The drunk driver was said to be, “…speeding down the wrong side of the road in a half-ton truck with no headlights” (159). As a result of this, Russell’s family members were seriously injured.…

    • 1406 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Glass Pavillion

    • 323 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the summer of 1913, Bruno Taut architect and urban planner began work on the experimental glass pavilion. He proposed to build this for the upcoming Werkbund exhibit in Cologne, Germany. Taut was known for his theoretical work and was seeking new artistic spirit. Pioneering the way, the Glass Pavilion is one of the earliest architectural examples of Expressionism.…

    • 323 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Glass Castle

    • 254 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Rex Walls was the unconventional father due to the occasional endangerment of his children. People think he’s an unfit parent. However, Rex was a loving, caring father who teaches his kids important values, with many positive parenting traits who just messes up from time to time. Rex cares when he gives his kids stars for Christmas because he doesn’t have money for toys. Rex says, “Years from now, when all the junk [the other kids] got is broken and long forgotten, you’ll still have your stars” (Walls 41). Rex was almost always positive about negative things. He always liked to look at situations as adventures instead of troubles. Giving his children stars when money’s tight is a good example of trying to be positive about something negative. When Rex woke them all up in the middle of the night and told them they had to leave, he would make it sound adventurous. He would say that the FBI or the Mafia was after them. When they spent the night in the desert and didn’t have pillows, Rex told them it was part of his plan to get them to have good posture. He said, “The Indians didn’t use pillows . . . and look how straight they stood.” (18). Another example of both a positive parenting trait and turning things into an adventure is shown on pages 36-37 when Jeannette says there’s a monster under the bed. When told about a monster under the bed Rex turned it into an adventure. He made up a…

    • 254 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Hard Work never fails

    • 58015 Words
    • 233 Pages

    So the tall mother wasn't a mouthpiece — he was a quack. She wouldn't have cared if he was Jack the Ripper. All she wanted was to get out of that stinking courtroom before they found out it wasn't her birthday. The doctor drove her to his apartment, making small talk that did not require any answers, giving Carol a chance to pull herself together and think things out He stopped the car in front of a modern apartment building on Seventy-first Street overlooking the East River.…

    • 58015 Words
    • 233 Pages
    Better Essays