Jealousy is a very big theme that is indisputably visible throughout most of the story. in Chapter two, Finny ran into a small encounter with Mr. Patch-Withers, a substitute who held a tea. At the tea, Finny wears his school tie as a belt, which is discourteous to the prestigious school. Gene stated, “This time he wasn't going to get away with it. I could feel myself becoming …show more content…
After Gene jounced the tree and made Finny fall, he reconciled in there room. “I spent as much time as i could alone in our room, trying to empty my mind of every thought, to forget where i was, even who was…..i decided to put on his clothes. This gave me such intense relief….I would never stumble through the confusing of my own character again”(Knowles, 63). Gene briefly explains that he loses guilt and admires to become Finny.
Jealousy, search for identity and warfare have a great impact on this book. Knowles portrayed an significant story that briefly describes lives of boys who are coming of age to men in a setting that is hard to site which is World War ll which was an horrific time for many countries. The boys had to almost be perfect but, this volume shows they weren’t near to perfect. They were finding each and every one of themselves at