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Sammy By John Updike Character Analysis

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John Updike’s coming-age-tale of A&P features the curious main character, Sammy, and his short voyage to power. Upon seeing three bikini clad girls walk into his grocery store, Sammy is faced with the tangible dissatisfaction he has experienced with his life. Sammy sees the leader of the girls, the one which he dubs “Queenie,” as a representation of a societal niche he has yet to climb to. The climax of the story, Sammy quitting his job and leaving the A&P, serves as a pivoting point for the young man’s life. Sammy experiences a series of internal conflicts which, in essence, is caused in cascade by the girls walking into the store in bathing suits. All of the conflicts faced by Sammy are chalked up to his dissatisfaction with life.
Sammy’s reaction to the girls suggests a series of dissatisfaction with his life as a whole, and primarily his rank within life. He longs for Queenie and the status she holds as imagined by Sammy in his observation of the three girls. He observes her as she confidently struts along the aisles, never teetering in poise even as she sees Sammy and Stokesie, his coworker, studying her; Sammy notes her level of confidence and admires it as he thinks, “She must have felt in the corner of her eye me and over my shoulder Stokesie in the second slot watching, but she didn't tip. Not this queen. She kept her eyes moving across the racks, and stopped, and turned so slow it made my stomach rub the inside of my apron” (164). Even in initially referring to

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