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Review Of ' Big Fish Epic '

Good Essays

Rachel McGirl
Mr. Connolly
November 11, 2014
Period 3

Big Fish Epic Assessment

A teenaged boy dives into a lake to save three drowning children. Deep in the African brush, two volunteers save a lone lion cub. A police officer rescues a distraught and suicidal woman dangling from a ledge. Even though heroes differ in their departure, initiation, and return, they are still heroes nevertheless. Edward Bloom, a brave and compassionate man in the twentieth century, and Odysseus, a clever warrior living around 200 BC, share many important characteristics, yet have many differences in the departure, initiation, and return of their journey. Despite these dissimilarities, both are heroes in their own individual worlds. One important difference between Edward Bloom and Odysseus is their departure from the ordinary world. For Edward Bloom, his calling is psychological. “I wanted to be a great man,” (Wallace 21) states Edward as he lays on his deathbed. “Can you believe it? I thought it was my destiny. A big fish in a big pond – that’s what I wanted.” (Wallace 21). As you can see, Edward decided his calling was to be an accomplished man, and he knew he needed to go out and fulfill his destiny. However, Edward knew that he needed to leave Ashland to satisfy his calling. “In the verdant fields of Ashland he ran with his companions, and with gusto he ate and drank. It was life spent as if in a dream. Only one morning he woke and knew in his heart that he must go, and he told his

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