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Greasy Lake Character Anaylsis

Decent Essays

T.C. Boyle's "Greasy Lake" (1985), exposes the narrator to be the ultimate dissenter upon first glimpse. The anonymous main character goes beyond to appear rebellious to his friends, and anyone around him. Aside from the main character, two friends, Digby and Jeff, accompany the narrator on his journey to be bad on this “the third night of summer vacation” (Boyle, 1985, p. 615). The narrator explains that he and his friends were 19 years old, sported leather jackets, drank Tango and Thunderbird, and smoked marijuana, to produce the effect of being intimidating and cool to others. By the end of the story when the narrator has the chance to continue his false image of being a rebel, he decides to take another route, one that contradicts …show more content…

The narrator goes through character development when he replies, "I wanted to go home to my parents' house and crawl into bed" (Boyle, 1985, p. 621). In addition, the narrator indicates the urge to cry when asked about doing the drugs, something that a real bad ass would most likely not feel when asked that question. This, in my opinion, indicated a big character change in the narrator. From the beginning of the story, the author develops this character as being contrary to good and anything but a decent 19 year old. However, by the end of the story you really get to see the change occur in the narrator, as he comes to terms with the fact that he may not be as rebellious as he thought. The fact that the narrator chooses not to stay with the girls, and continue to be rebellious, was the author’s way of keeping the narrator from being substandard, because as a reader, it would have been unexciting to not see the change unfold in the main character.

References
Boyle, T. C. (1985). Greasy lake. In L. Kirszner & S. Mandell (Eds.), Literature: Reading, reacting, writing (7th ed., p. 614). Boston:

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