Sibling Differences in President Cleveland, Where Are You? by Robert Cormier

577 Words2 Pages

How different can two siblings be? In “President Cleveland, Where Are You?” Robert Cormier introduces readers to two brothers, Jerry and Armand, who seem don’t have that much in common. Jerry, the 11-year-old protagonist of the story, has one great interest at the start of the story: collecting trading cards. By the tale’s conclusion, however, Jerry comes to realize that there are things that are much more important than his personal interests, and the person most responsible for teaching Jerry this lesson is Armand. Though Jerry and Armand are quite different at the beginning of “President Cleveland, Where Are You?” the events of the story bring out many similarities between the two brothers. When readers first meet Jerry, he seems to care only about card collecting. Whenever he earns some money by running errands or washing windows, he immediately rushes to Lemire’s Drugstore to spend it on cowboy cards. Armand, on the other hand, has no interest at all in cowboy cards and seems to Jerry to be growing more and more distant from him. “He had recently become a stranger to me in many ...

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