Outside Edges Ivan Dorin Summary

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2. Throughout reading Ivan Dorin’s Outside Edges, it is clear that David’s goal at stated is to skate across the country. I think that skating across the country was important to David because he was looking to make his father proud of him. David’s father states in the beginning of the story, that he tried his best not to coddle his son, even though he wanted to show his immense affection, he restrained. I think that because of this, David felt he needed to do something grand to get the affected he wanted from his father. David quickly learns that there are many obstacles in his way when her starts to look at the logistics of skating across the country. The main being finding a path of rivers and streams that connect, after overruling skating along the highway. Luckily, he had some help doing this. The University in the story helped him to find the maps he needed to figure out …show more content…

These instances, the first being David’s father explaining a scenario where David skates along the highway, behind a Zamboni, and the second being David’s father imagining himself and David at the bottom of a frozen waterfall, while he stood on the bank, are the main points in the story that add humor. They perfectly illustrate the David’s father’s skepticism about his son’s dream, as he thought David would eventually come across a problem. I think that David’s father’s skepticism interfered with the two’s relationship so much that it drove them apart, and David inevitably turned to his maps for company. In the beginning when David’s father took him to the University Library, and at the end, David and his father get along, because of the for David and his goals (shown in the rink he David’s father made for him). The idea of humor is often misconstrued for disbelief or mocking, granted some humor is. And so, when someone presents a goal that is difficult to achieve, approaching the concept with humor usually is not a great idea, as a lot of people can take this as a lack of

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