The ''Greasy Lake" seems to be influence by Bruce Springsteen ''Spirit in the Night". It is like used an epigraph from his song even though its not about the characters of the story. The characters and actions are completely made up. The ''Greasy Lake'' seemed to just imitate the song and take on its a free spirit.…
The Chevy owner is a tough muscular character. The biker, whom is regarded as a bad older character, is said to be dangerous. The vehicles are a representation of the individuals who drive them. Another symbol of danger the young men face is Greasy Lake itself. The lake is described as being "fetid and murky, the mud banks glittering with broken glass and strewn with beer cans" (Boyle 189). It is a sign that nothing good lies within. Several times throughout the story, Boyle refers to not only the main characters as being greasy, but also describes a variety of other people in the same way. This ties the lake and the greasy characters together. It is ironic that not only is the lake named Greasy Lake, but the individuals who hang out there are also referred to as being greasy characters as well. This led to violent subsequent events later on in the story, as the narrator gets chased and beaten up, and during these events, the narrator realizes he was indeed a bad kid, but learns through the tough way that there are even worse people in this…
It can easily be seen that Digdy was scared out of his wit and wanted nothing more to do with the Greasy Lake. Just as soon as they were getting in the car, a mustang appeared and two girls stepped out of the car. Digdy now was even more in a hurry to leave when he said “Come on…Let’s get out of here (Boyle 10).” This is the second time he suggested to his friend that he no longer wanted to be there and when he said, he wanted to leave this time, to me it seemed that he was even more terrified then when he said he wanted the leave the first time. They did not leave in time so they would miss the girls, so one of them come up to the car and said “hi (Boyle 10)”, and the narrator described the faces as “We looked at her like zombies (Boyle 11).” This part describes just how scared they were and to see more people at the lake did not make them feel better or safer. To me it seemed that this scared them even more and they did not really know what these girls wanted nor did they want to stay and find out and Digdy was the first one to mention so. Then they all left. Digdy and his friends were all terrified and they could never grasp a bad character vive after what they had just been…
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.…
Thomas John Boyle’s short story “Greasy Lake” is about a troubled, rebellious, out of control teen that learns that being “bad” is not at all what it cuts out to be. Through the gloomy narrative the protagonist goes from having a pleasurable worry free time into a horrific night that will be forever haunting to him and his juvenile friends Digby and Jeff. In this complicated story these “bad” characters nearly took a man’s life away, all from an easy joke they thought they were performing on their pal Tony Lovett. Little did they know this prank they were playing on Tony Lovett was inaccurate; reality set in and they established they were performing a prank on another “bad” character that banged these immature kids up. The most important theme to this story is living worry free, dangerous, and carelessly will escort an individual to a life they do not want, or willing to live. This paper will elucidate how epiphany, dynamic character and foreshadowing ties into the theme of the story.…
He helps the alcoholic when she is drunk, is there for the prostitute when she is feeling guilty, and overall looks out for the safety of them all. Despite his career as a gambler, he is an honest and fair man. He does everything he can to protect the people he is with. When Tom and Piney join the group, he takes them in and cares for them as well. It is when a snow storm hits and he sends Tom a couple days late before he starts to realize perhaps if he had sent Tom a day or two earlier, they all might have lived. He begins to think it could all be his fault. He watches his companions die a slow death and then kills himself.…
He realizes that he is not one of those “bad characters” that he considered himself as in the beginning of the story. He thought of committing suicide thinking how he was going to tell his parents about the car being destroyed. He thought of if this was how he wanted his life to be about. He knew he got away with things that he could have been in prison for. The young men collect their thoughts and reflect on the events of the night, yet another car pulls into Greasy Lake. The narrator realizes who they are looking for but says nothing about the body in the lake. The girls offer drugs, something that they would not have turned down just a few short hours before. But, they do turn down the good time being offered to them by the girls. They leave in a broken down, beat up car. They leave with a new outlook on life and the…
Jason, a man that had just moved out of his parents house. He lived in Tampa Bay, Florida. He set up all of his belongings, and went to sleep. He woke up the next morning, wondering what he would do in his new house. Suddenly, there was a knock on the door, Jason ran to open the door. No one was there, just a flyer for a bowling tournament. He read where it was and then saw the prize for the winner. The winner got 500,000$ in a check! That's half of a million dollars! Jason looked at the time of the bowling tournament. It was on July 7th, 2016. He kept the flyer, and closed the door.…
I am writing this letter to tell you what I thought about your character analysis essay over “Greasy Lake.” Over all the paper was very descriptive and gave the name of a “bad character” to the protagonist you were describing. You had good support and examples for every point you made. I understood the points you were trying to make about him and his friends. Although, the repetition used about the “character” was used quite often. Phrases such as “bad character” were used two or three times each paragraph and I believe that is too much. The structure of some of the sentences I circled were poor compared to some of the really good points compared. It was clear that you were talking about the protagonist in the story and what you thought the author was trying to make him look like. (The label that he made him and his friends look like.) Good job on this essay. I believe it does need a little work, other than the MLA style, which is good, but the points are understandable the reader of your essay.…
The main symbol of the story is the arroyo, or river. In real life, it is a place to play, but symbolically it is a place to rebel, because they are not supposed to go there and swim in the forbidden water or yell forbidden words. "It was our river, though, our personal Mississippi, our friend from long back, and it was full of stories" (202). As they grow older, the arroyo does not change thought the years, but the boys' view of it does. As time goes by, the arroyo displeases the boys, and they decide to stop visiting that specific forbidden area. "Nature seemed to keep pushing us around one way or another, teaching us the same thing every place we ended up" (203). The narrator looks back, as an adult, at the arroyo for what it actually was in reality, a river polluted by sewage. This shows that when you're a child the littlest things can feed your craving for rebelling, but as change occurs and reality shows it ends up becoming a loss and a lesson.…
To conclude I compared and contrast two unique stories that expressed and showed many different kinds of stereo types, peoples, and the kinds of issue many of them dealt with. I started off by comparing the two stories by their kind of irony they used, which was a dramatic irony. I spoke on the definition of the irony and how the two stories conveyed it. I also compared them by highlighting how they both had a tragic ending involving death. With Ivan from the Death of a Government Clerk dying from stress and Lizzie from One Summer dying from a car crash. Although they sounded quite similar they both had many different things. The way they handle their situation was one of their main difference. In One Summer Jack handled his situation about his wife Lizzie dying a lot much better by living with his other family members in peace but Ivan from the Death of a Government Clerk handled his situation horrible and died from stress because of his situation. In this essay you witness the comparison and differences between two stories with two characters that encounter their own unresolved conflict but then sought them out differently in their own…
It's about how to live. It shows what people throughout the years have done. Survival is something essential to move on with life. Santiago is a perfect example, he is an outcast who talked to the fish and was taken by as crazy sometimes. Santiago loves to fish and has done it his whole life. That is his vocation and how he lives life. Santiago with all his knowledge passed it on to the boy and although the boy was unaware then taught him how to live life and survive it which was all one can really do. Like the boy we are also still trying to figure it out until someone teaches us and trying to find our one true…
At first glance the two short stories “The Storm” by Kate Chopin and “Greasy Lake” by T. Coraghesson Boyle seem completely different, at least to the untrained eye. Only when one gets down to the nuts and bolts, so-to-speak, of any story can we truly see what they have to offer. Of course anyone can take a meaningful idea at face value, but as soon as we get to the core of any tale we see its true potential. While there are many obvious differences between “The Storm” and “Greasy Lake”, they are quite similar in their usage of the elements of fiction: they have styles all their own that depict meaningful lessons (or themes) that still resonate today; they gave their settings, which are central to the stories very development, life through the use of figurative language, symbols, and inevitably showed how it affected the characters; and lastly they provided unique but equally engaging tones with those fictional elements.…
The authors of the modern English short story “no longer attempt to make daily life more entertaining by inventing exotic plots. Instead, modern short story writers have tended to base their narratives on their own experience; here the focus is much more on the less spectacular aspects of life, on the significance underlying what is apparently trivial. The result of such perceptive writing is perfection of form, harmony of theme and structure, and precision of style to reveal the subtleties of the human mind and of human behaviour.…
Cited: Boyle, Thomas. “Greasy Lake.” Compact Literature. Ed. Laurie Kirszner, and Stephen Mandell. Wadsworth, Cengage learning, 2013. 573-580. Print.…