Right from the beginning we know that Cross is in love with Martha, so it must play a big role in the rest of the book.. although knowing that Cohn was a boxer really meant nothing to the novel. I'm going to go ahead and say that love is a motif for Cross's life. He loved Martha, but he also loved his men and he was at constant battle trying to prioritize. Martha definitely had it in the bag. Even after he tried to "shut down the daydreams" (page 23), he still thought about her too much. He told himself he would be a better commander, but all the while he thought about how much he hated her, but still loved her. Or what he was going to do with the lucky pebble. "He [dispensed] of love; it was not now a factor" (page 25). Before Lavender's death he was trying to love his men more than Martha, but afterwards, he tried to hate Martha, which disabled him to love his men.
At this point, I think he is just as confused as I am. Because after chapter 2, we find out that he never gets Martha. So why is she playing such a big role?
Lit Terms
allusion
ambiguity
analogy
antagonist
antihero
apostrophe
broken rhyme scheme
catharsis
comedy
connotation
didactic
dynamic character
egos
explication
extended metaphor
external conflict
first person point of view
flat character
foil
foreshadowing
hyperbole
imagery
Indirect Characterization
irony
juxtaposition
metaphor
mood
motif
motivation
nasty tattoo cat
Othello
oxymoron
paradox
personification
pun
resolution
rising action
simile
situational irony
stream of consciousness
suspense
symbol
theme
tone
tragedy
I thought Martha was going to play a huge role, too. I was worried it was going to get all Brett-Robert-otherguys on us, but she hasn't been mentioned in the last few chapters I've read at all....
ReplyDeleteI don't really understand the organization of this book.. It's not really a story. I guess not every book has to be a story, but I've never read one that's not.
ReplyDeleteHow does this compare to your motorcycle instructional book you read sophomore year? =)