The glass castle so far to me is a really good book. From my reading i like the book because through out the book she has all these wacky totally different stories that she tells about her past life. Most children dont live the way she did but in reality there are actually kids who live like this and they have a book they can relate to. So i think its really cool that she shared her story about how she grew up. I also think its interesting that she went through so much hardships as a kid and ended up being able to write about her different experiences.
Category Archives: The Glass Castle
Page 164
At this point of the story the Walls have moved to West Virginia. Some stuff has happened like the incident with Brian and Erma. That was very disturbing. Them having to move into a really old house and the encounterment with the big rat was werid. If I was Maureen I wouldn’t be able to sleep either. How the kids dug up a big hole for the Glass Castle but it ened just being a place for their trash. I thought that was a messed up thing the dad did. The kids but a lot of hard work just for it not to be ises like they had planned
The Glass Castle Mid Review
Currently being only half way done with The Glass Castle leaves me with many unanswered questions, but one specific question has resided in my mind: How much more will the children take?
As I flip through the pages, I find myself analyzing every detail: the way the parents treat the children, how the children react to the unrecognizable abuse, and the attitude each character acquires through different situations. I am constantly wondering how the children are able to tolerate the corruption of the lives they live.
After being driven out of their old “home,” they find peace in a new town known as Battle Mountain. For the first time in a long time they were safe; they had money and a house. This house was not some raggedy house they were used to living in; it was huge and decorated with luxurious decor. The children believed that this was it for them; a chance for a new life, a better life, but sadly that was not the case. Just like every other time they go back to their old ways. Shortly after they established Battle Mountain as their home, the ample amounts of money they once had quickly turned into a few pennies. Their mother introduced them into the idea of stealing and dishonest acts to get money and items they needed. With Rex back to his drinking habits, and no more money flowing in; mother began to introduce the idea of moving east to Rex’s mothers home. They moved in with Grandma Erma, thinking this would solve their problems, and in some sense it did, but their lives were still on a constant downward spiral. Through all the alcoholism, abuse, distrust, and pain the children still remained loyal to their parents. I am confident that their personal well-being will soon come to trump family devotion.
Growing up in Welch [focused on the kids]
I appreciate the growth of the kids as they live in Welch. It becomes apparent that since their parents can’t really support them, the Walls kids have had to learn to provide for themselves. In school, the kids seemed to have no friends. The kids had to scrounge through the garbage in order to be able to eat during school. Poor Jeannette had an unnecessary amount of sexual harassment issues as well, before and while she was at Welch. Lori essentially became the prominent family figure to the children. As the oldest child, she was the one that started to have thoughts about the future. She and Jeannette had decided on the idea to save up money so that they can go to New York when they graduate. All of the Walls kids had to get jobs in order to survive, Jeannette babysat, worked at a jewelry store, and wrote for the school paper (although that wasn’t exactly a paid job). Lori took art commissions and Brian did manual labor. When their mom left to renew her license, Lori went to an art camp; leaving Jeannette as the authority in the house. This duration of time shows how manipulative her dad is, Jeannette had a specific budget planned out and it was perfectly able to support her family while her mom was gone. Her dad keeps manipulating Jeannette to give him money for alcohol, and she finds it hard to decline. After giving away too much money, her dad comes back to her and asks her to help him gain all of the lost money back. He takes her with him as he swindles a man named Robbie out of his money. Robbie got upset for losing his money, but he asks if Jeannette wanted to go to his apartment upstairs and listen to some music. Expecting her dad to help her, he just tells Robbie “Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do”. The two (Jeannette and Robbie) go upstairs and, as Jeannette expected, he tried to undress her. He gets beaten away by Jeannette and also got disgusted by the alarming amount of wounds and scars that Jeannette had amassed over the years. Expecting her dad to beat up Robbie for trying to assault her, Jeannette tells him what had happened. Rex replies with “I’m sure he just pawed you some, I knew you could handle yourself.” How would you feel if you were in Jeannette’s shoes, having whatever trust you had left in your parent seemingly thrown out of the window?
The Desert
Rex Walls often has the family do the “skedaddle” and while he claims it is because FBI agents are after them, Rose says that it is actually to avoid bill collectors. Rex is a whiz at math and engineering, but he has no interest in keeping a job for long, so the family shuttles between small desert mining towns in the southwest. Because of their nomadic lifestyle, Jeannette and her siblings do not attend school regularly. Mom teaches them to read and Dad teaches them math as well as various survival strategies, such as gun shooting. Jeannette loves the desert and compares her family with the cactus plants that fatten up after a rain — like cacti, her family has to take what it can when it can in order to survive.
The Open Minded Mother
The mother in Glass Castle is really an interesting character; The way she see’s the world is unique and different from other regular people point of views. Her husband and her seem not to be on the same page most of the time. In the book, it looks like she depends on him for living since she ran from home. In her young days there was a lot of strictness going on in her house. She’s a care free woman who doesn’t like the normal teachings and prefers for her kids to learn on their own.
Glass Castle: First Impression
The beginning started off with a short view of the present day. The first chapter, albeit small, gave the reader a good look at how things changed when she grew older. When it came to the second chapter it was divided into smaller sub-chapter sections. Throughout this area of the book it was still about the same girl in the first chapter, just much, much younger, in fact starting at three years old. Her life went on, and the family? Well, the family was a mess. Her dad was her hero, yet he made so many decisions that landed their family in a bad place each time. I hope that he would become a better person throughout the book since his family is behind him 100%.
Growing up in Welch [focused on the parents]
I appreciate the clear growth of the Walls kids, and the slow but obvious decline of their parents. It’s interesting seeing that as the kids grow older, they start to doubt their parents. We start seeing how childish and irresponsible their mother is. When the kids are struggling to feed themselves, they discover that their mom was spending precious shopping money on chocolate that she’s been eating by herself. They learn more about how moody their mother is, and how her irresponsibility leads her to having issues in her job. The book even mentions that when their mom left on vacation to renew her teaching license; she enjoyed her free time there so much she decided to quit her job, so it made her trip essentially worthless. The dad is almost never home, and instead, he stays in bars for the entire day. The book makes a point about Jeannette having to find and drag her dad out of bars whenever she needs him for something. We get a deeper look at why Rex Walls left this place too; seeing as how awful his mom treats the Walls kids. After a “specific incident” between Brian and Rex’s mom; the kids get a possible, yet horrifying idea as to why their dad tried his hardest to leave this place.
First impression
The book starts off with the author as an adult in New York living her life. She sees her mother who is homless as she hides from her. As i continued reading it explained more and more as in why she hid from her. It starts from her first clear memory from when she was three and she caught herself on fire while making hot dogs. Her mom let her continue makeing hot dogs because it was a lesson learned.
I like the creativity the dad has and how he gives them stars as their present, but I don’t like how he decides everything that happens
Glass castle blog 1
In the beginning of the book you see how the main character is mentally affected by seeig her mom. Later you read on and slowly get background information on the main character and her mom, seeing how the irresponsible parenting results in financial struggle as well as injuries. You soon realize that the parents are crazy and that’s why they are the way they are.