Based off of the novel it is worse for Charlie to remember times in his life when he was bullied or harassed by others. In the novel shortly after Charlie's operation, Charlie is starting to remember things that have happened previously in his life. He is gaining more knowledge as time goes on and he is starting to understand what certain things actually mean. To begin with, in the book Charlie thinks that everyone at work is a friend of his and whenever they laugh, they are laughing with him. This however is not the case because in the novel Charlie is asking where he can go to learn and become smart, and Frank and Joe Carp make fun of him. On page 27 it states "She rote the name down on a paper and Frank laffed and said dont go getting so eddicated that you wont talk to your old frends...He was laffing and Joe Carp was laffing...They are all good …show more content…
Charlie believes that he is good friends with everyone at the bakery but that is certainly not the case. Additionally, later on in the novel Charlie remembers a night when he went to party with his friends and they gave him a lot to drink. At the end of the party they ask Charlie to check if it is raining outside and they ditch him. On page 30 it states "I dont remember how the party was over but they asked me to go around the corner to see if it was raining and when I came back there was no on their." This quote indicates that once again his coworkers are making fun of him and Charlie thinks that they are being nice to him and friendly. This scenario leaves Charlie upset because he starts to wonder why they left him. Furthermore, later in the novel Charlie goes to another party and Ellen is rubbing up against him and makes Charlie feel funny. At the party Charlie starts to remember some memories when he is a kid and it finally dawns on him that they are making fun of
In Robert Newton’s novel “Runner, Charlie Feehan, the 15-year-old main character, lives with his Ma and younger brother in the slums of Richmond. Charlie's father died from Spanish flu three months before the events in the novel happened, After Charlie's father died and got taken away therefore Charlie had to support his Ma. Charlie Feehan respects his family along with friends above all else.
Charlie is very far from what most people call normal: he is shy, introverted, awkward, independent, paranoid, confused, respectable and kind; showing many examples of this throughout the book. He keeps to himself for the most part and is constantly in his own head. Aside from the many negative traits he also has many attributes: he is a loyal friend and listens to the people he talks to, he is a caring person and comforts those in need. However he has his flaws as well: Charlie can get very angry and upset at others which causes him to lash out with violence or sadness, he is extremely sensitive, crying frequently and constantly questioning himself. Several of his peers labeled him as nerd or a weirdo, which damaged
On page four while he was having his dream, he rescued Joan from the river. After he woke up, he realized the dream was a message telling him to become friends with Joan. On page seven it states, “...what he had taken for cruelty had been love, that far from hating her everybody had loved her from the beginning…” This proves that Charlie could have showed his true opinions in the first place. These parts of the story are when Charlie realizes that he should have shown his own opinions in the first place, instead of trying to become
The people on Maple Street were very flustered at everything, so their human minds started to blame all their long-time friends. One of the many times they did this was when they tried to say that Steve Brand, (the person who was fixing his care while this whole incident happened), was the monster. On page 8 of the play, it quotes “there’s been plenty of times you spend hours down in your basement workin’ on some kind of radio or something. Well, none of us have ever seen that radio.” Also, Charlie was the person that really drove everybody to believe in the monster. Towards the end of the story, Charlie shoots Pete Van Horn in the quote, “Charlie swings around, raises the gun, and suddenly pulls the trigger. The sound of the shot explodes
Before and after the A.I. surgery Before the A.I. surgery Charlie had a mental disorder were he couldn’t learn, read, or write. Charlie had a job at Donnegans factory. Everyone at the factory bullied him. “It’s a funny thing. I never knew that joe and frank and the others liked to have me around all the time to make fun of me. Now i know what it means when they say.” “You pulled a Charlie Gordon.” “I’m ashamed” (keyes,231.) After the A.I. surgery charlie didn’t get bullied at donnegans factory when he got his job back. Charlie was always getting bullied when he was younger and before the A.I. surgery.
Charlie had a very bad memory span before the operation and could not remember anything from his childhood. After Charlie has the operation preformed on him, he is able to recall memories from his past. Almost all of his childhood memories are ones he would probably rather forget and not have uncovered.
Charlie’s friends even take advantage of how nice he is. They always make him the root of their jokes. When Charlie asks a barber shop owner to move his illegally parked car, the owner laughs at him and just throws him the keys to the car and tells him to move it himself. The whole town takes advantage of Charlie though, not only his friends. In the supermarket a woman asks to cut in front of him inline and then ends up having a cart full of groceries. This is Charlies breaking point. He starts tensing up, you can tell something is happening. All of a sudden he starts talking in a different voice, and finds vagaclean in the woman’s cart that cut in front of him. So to take his anger out on her he gets on the store microphone and announces she has vagaclean in her cart. We learn this new personalities name when he is drowning a young girl in the water fountain who disobeyed him earlier. When the girl says she is going to tell her father on him, he announces that he is Hank. After this change in personality he starts going
First of all, why Charlie shouldn’t have gotten the surgery is because he started understanding everyone and how they felt. This stressed him out a lot. He felt like he didn't belong with others. “Now I know what it means when they say “to pull a Charlie Gordon.” I'm ashamed.” (209). In this sentence, Charlie recognizes why his friends liked having him around so much. It was so that they could make fun of him and play tricks on him for their own fun. Also Charlie had felt bad about a kid at a restaurant. “I jumped up and shouted, “Shut up! Leave him alone! It's not his fault he can't understand! He can't help what he is! But for
Charlie was a man that did not know how to stand up for himself. He allowed his peers to bully him, and treat him like he is worthless. Charlie thinks that if he allows people to laugh at him, and tease him, they will become his friend. He thinks “Its easy to make frends if you let
Before the enhancing surgery, Charlie Gordon seemed to have depend and trust others, while those people didn’t have his back. This could be a problem in the future, because people have to learn to be independent so when they lose someone important, they don’t crack under pressure. In the story, Keyes writes, “Sometimes somebody will say hey look at Joe or Frank or George he really pulled a Charlie Gordon. I dont know why they say that but they always laft” (Keyes, 289). Daniel Keyes uses dramatic irony as a way of displaying Charlies perception of his friends. Charlie assumes he has very nice friends, but the audience knows that his
At the beginning, Charlie is without friends and is rather alone. He is very gifted and quite an overthinker which expels him from the usual teenage social groups. This changes, however, when he meets Sam and Patrick at a football game. They expose him to all new experiences. Resulting from his new friendships, is his relationship with Mary Elizabeth, his experimentations with drugs, and new knowledge of being a person. During this time, he is increasingly happy because Charlie was finally living.
Charlie experiences drastic changes throughout the story. All of them are mentally due to the experimental operation he had. In the
In Flowers For Algernon, many people judge Charlie because he is different from them. An example of this is how all of Charlie’s so called “friends” at the bakery treat him. They laugh and make fun of him because of how he looks and acts, just because it is different then them. These “friends” at the bakery do everything they can to humiliate Charlie, they play mean pranks on him, and always make fun of him, but he can not do anything back because he does not know how to. These guys invited Charlie to a party so that they could make fun of him and have a good laugh. Charlie
If this story was a narrative, there would be more thoughts of Charlie’s in each situation. As he closes the day or, writes about a previous day, it is impossible to record all his thoughts; to add to this, he knows that others will be reading it and has admitted that it is hard for him to openly admit everything (Keyes 59). Although these are rather minor problems, each affects the story in small ways. The story is so focused on Charlie and he doesn’t know everyone’s stories that it causes him to be blindsided and not understand why a character acts the way they do. This is most prevalent when Burt tells Charlie about Professor Nemur wife’s character (Keyes 152). At this point, Charlie learns that Nemur’s wife has a lot of control over his career and without her, he wouldn’t be where he is now. Other details, like these, would help add to the story to give a more complete view of each character.
Throughout the novel Charlie’s personality and intelligence level changes a lot. In the beginning Charlie is happy, has friends, he’s retarded, and can’t remember a lot of things. “I fergot his last name because I dont remebir so good.” (Keyes 2),