Holes By Louis Sachar

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Having to dig holes in a dry hot area for 18 months as a punishment for a crime you didn't commit. How does that sound to you? In the book Holes, by Louis Sachar, Stanley Yelnats is sent to a camp and has to dig holes as a punishment for “stealing the shoes”. The theme of Holes is growing up because in the story, Stanley is learning lessons, losing his innocence, and has to take responsibility.

In Holes, Stanley was accused of stealing shoes. As a punishment, for 18 months he has to go to camp Green Lake, a camp for boys where you have to dig a 5 feet deep, 5 foot in diameter hole everyday. By digging holes, Stanley is supposed to be learning how to be a better person. The purpose of him digging the holes is to build character. “You know why you're digging holes? Because it's good for you. It teaches you a lesson.”(Sachar,138). The quote explains Camp Green Lake’s philosophy. “ You make a bad boy dig a hole ona hot day and it turns him into a good”. They make them dig holes to build character. …show more content…

He has lost his innocence because no one had or will believe him because of all the “proof” there is to say otherwise. When they went into his room, they found a poster of the person’s shoes they claimed he stole. They also saw that there were shoes all over the house. “Stanley was not a bad kid. He was innocent of the crime for which he was convicted. He’d just been in the wrong place at the wrong time”. The quote explains how he didn’t steal the shoes. They had just fell from the sky on to his head, explaining how he was just at the wrong place at the wrong

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