Analysis Of The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls

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Almost every single creature of on earth raises their offspring before sending them off on their own. In the The Glass Castle, an autobiographical memoir, Jeannette Walls details her childhood experience growing up in her dysfunctional, quirky, and nomadic family. Her parents, Rex and Rosemary, fills her and her siblings, Brian, Lori, and Maureen, childhoods with bad situations for a family. This includes alcoholism, unstable jobs, unstable homes, mood swings, and poverty. However, their parents teach them many skills that would not have been acquired if they grew up in a different setting. The children are taught self-sufficiency, hard work, and compassion. Despite the hardships Jeannette had growing up with her parents, it was still in her and her siblings’ best interest to grow up with the parents they had. …show more content…

Lori became a freelance artist, which she enjoyed and was successful. Brian, who had wanted to become a cop, became an NYPD officer when he grew up. When Rex nears his death, he reflects on his role as a father; “‘I got a lot to regret about my life,’ he said. ‘But I’m goddamn proud of you, Mountain Goat, the way you turned out. Whenever I think of you, I figure I must have done something right’”(279). The love and pride for his children is evident. Rex may not have been able to save himself from his own demons, but his children learned from him. Jeannette graduates from an Ivy league school, Barnard, and lands high profit jobs writing newspapers and books. Without coming from a greatly educated childhood, she still ends up succeeding in what she loved the most, writing. The regrets that Rex had probably included not being able to provide for his children. But his daughter’s hard work and resourcefulness that she learned from growing up in the environment that Rex had given her, helped her in the

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