Finished Booklist
Stolen by: Lucy Christopher
Perks of Being a Wallflower by: Stephen Chbosky
Sold by: Patricia McCormick
Gone Girl by: Gillian Flynn
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
“Ashes” Reading Response
Juliette Daignault 802
Divorce
is a major difficulty that many teens face in their life. In the short story
“Ashes” by Susan Beth Pfeffer, the reader is brought into the life of a girl
named Ashes who is affected by the challenges of divorce. During this time Ashes
feels the weight of being torn between her very different parents. Her father
who makes promises he cannot keep and her mother who is grounded and realistic.
In the story, we can see how complicated relationships affect the choices we
make.
In
the story the character Ashes talks about her father in a kind, caring way,
making him sound like a special person in Ashes’ life. He gives her what she
thinks she wants, and she loves him for it. For example, Ashes says, “That winter, it felt like every
time I saw my father, the sun cast off just a little more warmth than it had
the day before.” We can compare this quote to how winters are cold and bland,
like what her life could be like. But then, it explains when she’s with her
father its seems to be warmer, meaning her father makes her feel happy. Ashes describes
her father as wonderful person to be around, and someone she feels comfortable
with. As the story progresses her father asks her a deeper question that may
change opinions on whether he is truly a good person. Ashes’ father asks her to
take money from her mother’s “safe jar.” “I looked out the window and saw only
ash gray sky. In the cold stillness of the night, I could hear my fathers car
keening in the distance.” At this moment Ashes is deciding whether to take the
money. When she looks out she describes the sky as gray and dark, unlike how
she had mentioned him before. This leads us to believe that her father in the
end was not the parent who provided for Ashes.
Not
only is Ashes’ relationship with her father complicated, but she also has a
complex relationship with her mother as well. She never portrays her mother as
being a unique or impactful person. “With Mom, there are a lot of rainy days
and she takes a grim sort of pleasure in being ready for them.” This quote is
also a metaphor in saying her mother isn’t the parent who makes things
necessarily fun or gives Ashes what she thinks she wants. We can see that there
is a drastic difference in how Ashes describes her mother from her father in
the beginning of the story. Ashes makes her father seem like the better parent
and her mother less important. Yet, after Ashes dad asks her to take the money
from her mother we question who the better parent is. “The apartment was quiet.
It always felt a little colder when mom wasn’t there. Even with the lights on,
it seemed a little darker.” This is where Ashes’ feelings towards her mother shift.
This is after Ashes’ dad asks her to take the money. Ashes is now describing what
it feels like without the mother and is now mentioning the mother as the one
who provides the warmth and light in her life. Now, we see how Ashes might be
realizing that the mother has been the one who has been giving her what she
needs.
This
story shows us how people can be more complicated then they show themselves to
be. The story on the whole might be teaching us a lesson on how relationships
can complicate even the simplest things. Taking money from someone is wrong in
many senses, but yet for Ashes it is something she really has to think about. This
may be the result of how her own relationships complicated making decisions of
wrong from right hard. This can be a real life lesson as well, and should be
something to learn from. The complications of others around us can influence
how we make our own choices. All teens can apply this to themselves when making
decisions and take into account who has affected the choices we make.
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