Analysis Of The Lone Ranger And Toto Fist Fight In Heaven

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In The Lone Ranger and Tonto FistFight In Heaven, the author, Sherman Alexie, conveys a number of Native American experiences in each of his short stories. In most of his stories, he emphasizes on the resilience and endurance they demonstrate in their daily life and how each experience will bring them together as a community in the end. This is best shown in the short story Every Little Hurricane. Victor, the main character, has been a witness to the problems that plague the reservation since childhood, as he experiences many of the problems firsthand. For example, poverty, alcoholism, fights and isolation from the society outside of one’s reservation. In the end, he eventually sober up and move towards the more uncertain future.
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Fights and crime are so common that Indians hardly care much about it. Victor’s uncles, Adolph and Arnold, fight outside the house and are looking as they are “going to kill each other” (3). Nobody does anything as they are only witnesses and it is also so common that “[one] Indian killing another [does] not create a special kind of storm” they are just as the text mention, “generic” (3). To Victor, “strangers [will] never want to hurt each other that badly’ (2). This tells us that Adolph and Arnold shares a strong bond and have love of one another that makes them fight to kill each other as Victor is able to see the “look of hate and love on his uncle’s face” (3). The fight stops in the end, however, it may only be temporarily. The love touches both Adolph and Arnold through all the “memories of previous battles, storms that continually haunted their lives” (8). It is true, for instance, we will never want to punch another stranger walking down the street who just so happen to bump into us. However, the situation will be different when the stranger becomes a friend or sibling, most people will be cursing, may be even asking each other where their eyes are when walking down the street. This in turn becomes the little issue in life that may eventually bring us to love the friend or sibling even more, because you care them and does not want them to bump into a wall or fall off a cliff, may be. It can also …show more content…

In “Every Little Hurricane”, it says, “Victor’s cousins made him climb a tall tree during a rainstorm. The bark was slick, nearly impossible to hold on to but Victor kept climbing. …, but there were always sudden funnels of water that broke through, startling enough to nearly make Victor lose his grip. Sudden rain like promises, like treaties. But Victor held on” (7). This quote tells a lot, as Victor hates the rain. Hence, in reality problems are just like rain, they will continue to fall and drop hard on Victor, but he never let go of the most important things in his life, his parents. Those sudden funnels of promises that break through may be the promises his parents make to him, for instance, presents on a Christmas Eve. However, his father is too poor to buy him any present but he never let that pull him down, he hold on tighter to his parents. As his mother mention, “we’ve got each other” (4). It is this kind of inner strength and resilience a boy builds up on growing up in poverty, the bond form here is indeed “stronger than most anything” (8). He starts growing up towards an uncertain path to the future and many other promises will be made and many will fall through just like it happen here, but Victor will have by than have he will have inner strength and

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