Overcoming Hardships In The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls

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In The Glass Castle, a story about overcoming hardships, Jeannette Walls uses creative, descriptive diction and distinct characterization through connotation to portray that in many cases, one’s beauty comes from their hardships. Throughout the whole passage, found on page 38, Walls uses a lot of longer sentences full of lists, descriptive adjectives and verbs, multiple clauses, etc., giving the readers a vivid image of the situation, as well as characterization of especially her mother. A lot of her verbs include hints that whatever they’re doing, they spend a lot of time doing it; for example, “She spent all day working on…” and “Mom was also a writer and was always typing away on…” (Walls, 38). In both of these quotations, Walls uses descriptive …show more content…

These words become less frequent as she starts to talk less about her mom, and they come back again when the mother begins to speak, allowing readers to create a connotation between her mother and creativity, characterizing her a bit more. “Mom devoted herself to her art.” “She didn’t have any particular style; some of her paintings were what she called primitive, some were impressionistic and abstract, some were realistic. ‘I don’t want to be pigeonholed,’ she liked to say.” “Mom painted dozens of variations and studies of the Joshua tree. We’d go with her and she’d give us art lessons.” (Walls, 38) The above are all quotations in which we can see the mother as the artist that she is. Sometimes artists see things differently as the average person might, and we can see this coming from the mother in this passage when a young Walls wishes to grow the same tree that has been bent and broken, but from a sapling so she can grow it perfectly “nice and tall and straight.” (Walls, 38). At this the mother frowns, and introduces a theme of the novel through one of her own morals that hardships are unique to each and every person, making everyone special in their own way. She says, “It’s the Joshua tree’s struggle that gives it its beauty.” (Walls,

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