Rebel Heart Character Analysis

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One must have a purpose in life in order to live. Moira Young, author of the Dustlands series, wrote Rebel Heart which prominently showed the theme of finding a reason to live. The novel shows the significance of friends and family on one’s life. The book also shows how love and desire for happiness can become someone’s life goal. Lastly, the story shows how to accept the inevitable, and have the strength to choose your own decisions. Rebel Heart explores the themes of companionship, love and happiness, and the relationship between fate and free-will. In the novel, the importance of camaraderie was shown in the main character’s companions who helped her despite her choosing to work alone. In one scene, Saba, the protagonist, decided to leave …show more content…

Almost everyone was against Saba’s decision to endanger herself in order to save Jack in the beginning of the story. She still “let ‘em all hate [her]” and believes “the most important thing is [she’s] where [she] wants to be”, showing how determined she was to save Jack (Young 270). She loves Jack because “he brings [her] alive” and “he lets [her] breathe” (Young 553) especially from the pressures she had with her family and the feelings of guilt from the people she killed. Her brother, Lugh, also desired happiness. In the beginning the of the book, he wanted to go to Big Water, “where the land out there’s so rich… all you gotta do is shove stick in the ground, an the next day there’s a full-grown [tree]”, to live a stable life with his family (Young 125). When Saba started risking herself in order to save Jack, Lugh’s plan of having a peaceful life hindered. He also fell in love with Maev, so when she died, Lugh blamed everything to Saba. Because of this, the relationship of the two siblings went downhill, like “some kinda end, Lugh and [her]” (Young 564). Because of their desires, they made decisions that affected the outcome of their lives. The subject of fate and free-will was repeatedly pondered upon in the story. In the beginning, Lugh talked about how his “feeble-minded father always lookin to the sky fer answers when he should of bin lookin at us”, meaning that their

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