What Is The Conflict In A & P By John Updike

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In the story “A & P” by John Updike, Sammy is the narrator of the story. Sammy is a 19 year old boy that is a cashier at the A&P grocery store in a little town in Massachusetts. At the beginning of the story, three teen girls in swimsuits come into the store. This was not the social norm, especially since the store was so far from the beach, so this created a bit of a ruckus. Everyone comes to the grocery store, which intensifies the conflict. Sammy is a typical teenage boy – very opinionated, prideful, and full of desire. Unlike most boys his age, Sammy has a sharp sense of observation. First off, Sammy is very opinionated and prideful. He thinks the people in his town are all followers. He compares them to sheep: “All this while, the customers had been showing up with their carts but, you know, sheep, seeing a scene, they had all bunched up on Stokesie, who shook open a paper bag as gently as peeling a peach, not wanting to miss a word.” (Updike 456). He seems very disgruntled by the customers he has to deal with. At the end of the story, he quits because he feels like the manager wasn’t right to the girls and he wants to seem like their hero. Sammy also has a lot of pride in himself. He tries to set himself apart from the other two guys in the grocery store, Stokesie and …show more content…

He wants to break away from the mold everyone else works so diligently to fit in. He realizes that the girls are wealthy and living a carefree life, so he quits his job in attempt to get the girls’ attention. For example, “The sheep pushing their carts down the aisle – the girls were walking against the usual traffic – were pretty hilarious.” (Updike 453). Not only did the girls carelessly defy the normal traffic patterns of the store, they purchased herring snacks, which symbolizes high class. Deep down, he really does want to escape A&P and live a different life style; he wants to experience a more high-class life than he is living right

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