Comparison Of Friendship In Knowles's Novel A Separate Peace, By John Knowles

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Everyone has a life-story and each one is different. Some life-stories have been more difficult than others but each one has its “ups” and “downs”. John Knowles’ novel A Separate Peace focuses on a student named Gene and his life at Devon School. Gene’s time at Devon was a particularly “down” episode in his life. Gene was best friends with Phineas-also known as Finny-but they still had some notably rough patches. There was even a point where they weren’t sure if they were friends anymore. Another student named Brinker didn’t start it off particularly well with Gene. They became closer as friends, but near the end of the novel, Gene isn’t sure if he can trust Brinker again. Besides just World War II, there was another war going in this story, …show more content…

At the beginning, there were some rough areas. “‘You fixed it,’ he smiled widely. ‘You knew all the time. I’ll bet it was all your doing’” (Knowles 88). At this point, Brinker jokingly accuses Gene of making sure Finny was his roommate again so that he could have a dorm to himself while Finny was healing from the fall off the tree. From that point on, Brinker was great at getting under Gene’s skin. Later on, though, Brinker seemed to be nicer since he helped Gene and Finny run a “Winter Carnival.” “Brinker supervised the transfer, rattling up and down the stairwell and giving orders” (131). Gene was slightly confused now because Brinker seemed so annoying before and now he was helping him and Finny. They start to become better friends by hanging out more, but then there was an immense turning point at the end of the novel. It started with Brinker wanting to draw the truth out of Gene, that Gene was the cause of what made Finny …show more content…

Finny would always get out of trouble even if it seemed like there was no way he could, which was a reason why Gene became so jealous. “He had gotten away with everything. I felt a sudden stab of disappointment. That was because I just wanted to see some more excitement; that must have been it” (28). He thought that he wanted to see more excitement but he was actually jealous that Finny could get out of trouble when he did something he wasn’t supposed to do. This problem of jealousy grew to become almost fateful. Gene also starts to wonder why Finny wanted to wreck his studies. “Then a second realization broke out as clearly and bleakly as dawn at the beach. Finny had deliberately set out to wreck my studies” (53). This assumption turned out to be part of the reason why Gene jounced the tree branch and made Finny fall. Once he did it, Gene realized he made a massive mistake. Gene discovered that he was the one that was a jerk, not Finny. (Mellard 62) This part of the story was a clear example of why Gene had a war going on inside of him. Gene was best friends with Finny, but he became so jealous that he almost killed

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