Book Review: Nature Vs Nurture

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Nature v Nurture and Very personal Memoir

Nature verses Nurture is a concept that Childhood Psychologists have been studying since Piaget. This theory goes back and forth between the idea that human begins are born to be a certain way, or that their environment molds them into the person they are( Santrock 14). In The Glass Castle there are four children, all who grow up in the same home environment with the same family. Yet, the Walls children all end up being entirely different people. Their personal successes of all the child varied. Their future relationships were entirely different, and all in all they are extraordinarily opposite to one another. Though we only have some information on their lives it is clear to see that though they …show more content…

A situation that would have had clear legal repercussions had these children been living a normal life. Not only was this situation scarring to Jeanette but her bother and sister watched as she was flung from the car and was left behind. Again, research shows that this type of trauma would be absolutely terrifying. Anyone who was witness to this would have suffered long-term side effects of the abuse and neglect.
Jeannette Walls is obviously successful, after the premier of her book she went on to follow it with great fame. Between interviews and other books Jeanette has been able to take the terrifying and awful into a dream she hardly knew she had. Interviews with Jeannette tend to follow the same questions of the how, the why and the what. People find it hard to wrap themselves around the idea that someone who lived the way they did was able to come forth and write about it and follow its success into a very public light. However now only did Jeanette do so, but two of her other siblings were great as …show more content…

Yes there were numerous situations in which both parents were terrible. Yet there were a few moments that we saw love and compassion. The Walls lived an anything but ordinary life. They never really had any sense of normalcy and home was wherever they ended up. So looking at each Walls child we can assume that Nature verses Nurture is far from a black and white answer. Whether it was fame due to a memoir or a potential mental disorder there is no denying that these individuals were shaped by their lives. Yet what was the difference? What made them each different? Was it innate ability? Or was it environmental factors? Maybe it was a combination of those or none at

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