Character Analysis: All The Pretty Horses

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The final and most important attribute of the bildungsroman writing genre is the individual growth and maturity process of the protagonist. For a story to be considered a bildungsroman, it is required to have a ‘coming of age’ quality relating the the main character. The leading character in the story has to start their journey with an ignorant and naive attitude, and the mature and learn what it takes as the story progresses (Casano). Almost every story has the element of maturity, but some stories execute the technique with higher quality than others. The novel All the Pretty Horses and the short story I Want to Know Why both have comparable aspects of protagonist maturity. In All the Pretty Horses, Cole has a loss of innocence when he travels to Mexico. Cole discovers that he has to use violence to protect his morals, and blood is the price to pay in Mexico (Tomcat). Tomcat describes in his article that Cole went through a “brutal deconstruction of the peace and happiness that John Grady Cole enjoyed in his childhood. He engages in it out of necessity – violent action becoming an unwanted right-of-passage to his adult life” (Tomcat). Cole had to experience violence, prison, and death of people he is close to such as Blevins. All of these hardships in Mexico mature the young John Grady Cole, and he is forced to exit the innocence of living in Texas. Cole was forced to kill a cuchillero to fend for his life: …show more content…

As he did so John Grady brought his knife up from the floor and sank it into the cuchillero’s heart. He sank it into his heart and snapped the handle sideways and broke the blade off in him. (Mccarthy

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