In the book holes how does stanley change




















She is a descendant of Trout Walker and his wife Linda Miller. The Warden is a mysterious woman. She lives alone in a small cabin. She only seems to be interested in whether the boys have found something that has been buried in the dried-up lakebed.

The buried treasure is the total focus of her life. The Warden will do anything to find it. After Zero runs away, she has all of his files destroyed. She doesn't care about Zero. Her only concern is finding the buried treasure. She doesn't want her search halted for any reason. The Warden is a villainous and menacing person.

She enforces the rules by threatening to scratch offenders with her nails, which are polished with rattlesnake venom. The Warden never gets the buried treasure. Sir acts as the guard at Camp Green Lake.

He wears a big cowboy hat and sunglasses and has a rattlesnake tattoo on his arm. He habitually eats sunflower seeds, which have replaced his habit of smoking cigarettes. Sir appears to be an extremely unhappy person. He is sarcastic and verbally abusive to the boys, always reminding them that they aren't attending a Girl Scout Camp.

Ironically, the camp does become a Girl Scout Camp at the novel's end. Sir's actions are totally controlled by the Warden. Sir is humiliated when Stanley sees the Warden slap him after she has painted her nails with rattlesnake venom and hears the Warden tell him that she liked him better when he was smoking cigarettes than eating sunflower seeds which he claims Stanley stole from his truck. Afterward, to show Stanley that he is in charge, he repeatedly neglects to fill Stanley's canteen with water.

One day, Stanley is sure Mr. Sir put "some vile substance" in his canteen of water. Sir is smoking cigarettes once again — an indication of a character weakness. Even though Mr. In fact, Mr. Sir is intimidated by the Warden and, therefore, does whatever she says.

Pendanski is the counselor for the boys in Group D. He has a shaved head and a "thick, curly black beard. He talks to the boys about their goals and dreams and about the importance of taking responsibility for their behaviors and actions. He wants the boys to become "useful and hardworking members of society. Pendanski, however, is morally ambiguous.

He attempts to instill values and morality in the boys and then turns around and does the opposite. Whatever the Warden tells him to do, even if it means committing an illegal act destroying Zero's file , he does it without question. Pendanski is a follower and not a leader. X-Ray's name is pig latin for his given name, Rex. X-Ray wears glasses because he can't see very well, and he always uses the same shovel because he claims it is the shortest one the holes dug by the boys are measured with their shovels.

X-Ray is the unofficial leader of the boys in Group D. He is always first in line for lunch or to have his canteen refilled with water. X-Ray gives Stanley the nickname "Caveman. For example, when Stanley gives X-Ray the gold tube he has found, he suggests that X-Ray wait until the next morning to show it to Mr.

Pendanski, so that he can get more time off. I think his personality has changed more than his physical strengths, but they have both changed tremendously. Get Full Access Now or Learn more. There is a clear understanding of the character. However the analysis is not carried out in enough depth. Further analysis of structure is required to show how links can be made within the text. See related essays. Go on free knickers, give us all a laugh.

He may be bullied but he can't do anything about it so he tries to ignore it and comes up with some pretty feeble comebacks.

It's a very effective technique and encourages the reader to carry on. The author doesn't give the reader much information about the details of the son's killing. This is because the story is focussed on the mother promising her son's dead body a vendetta and how she actually carries it out. After men had enlisted to go to war including Larry LaSalle, there were job vacant, so he was hired by Mr Laurier to work in his drug store.

He noticed that Nicole dropped in a couple of time to buy her favourite candy, Butterscotch Bits. The point Bradbury is trying to make here is that technology may also control us, if we try to control technology. This warning stresses the vital question present in Bradbury? Eventually Larry asks Francis to leave him and Nicole alone and Francis obeys as everyone obeyed Larry LaSalle and he did not see how anything could go wrong with the silver star war hero. This essay has been marked by a teacher!

Sign up to view the whole essay and download a PDF with full teacher's notes. After all, he goes through life with his mouth closed and his head down: he's not the kind of kid that you really notice much. In fact, when we first meet Stanley, he's a bit like a leaf blowing in the wind. With his characteristic one-shouldered shrug and his absolute no-commitment attitude, he's managed to barely get by in life. He has no friends, and he's regularly bullied by a kid half his size.

Bottom line: things aren't great for our buddy Stan. So what's his problem, anyway? Why is he so down in the dumps? Well, think about it: how would you feel if you woke up every day knowing that you were cursed, knowing that no matter what you did, it just wasn't going to get any better?

Sure, you might do your best to convince yourself that the curse isn't real. After all, who believes in curses? But you'd still have that doubt in the back of your mind, telling you that despite everything you try, every step you take, failure is just out there waiting for you.

Imagine what that would do for your confidence. Don't get us wrong: Stanley's a good kid, and the narrator gives us enough positive details for us to warm up to him. For example, in the backpack he brings with him to Camp Green Lake, he has only "his toothbrush, toothpaste, and a box of stationery his mother had given him. He'd promised to write to her at least once a week" 3.

For Stanley, however, Camp Green Lake is no wasteland. At this camp he develops his personality, gains self-esteem, and finds confidence, pride, and friendship. He finds all these qualities by digging holes. Camp Green Lake is full of hidden treasures and when Stanley finally leaves the camp he is rich in more than one way. Stanley finds treasure right from the moment he finishes his first hole.

It takes him the whole day to dig it, but he does it. His pride is evident when the author writes, "He knew it was nothing to be proud of, but he felt proud nonetheless" After digging his first hole, Stanley starts changing in other ways too. This accomplishment teaches Stanley to depend on himself for survival and see life differently as well as to do things by himself.

It helps him start to grow up and become a young man. Stanley also finds friendship at Camp Green Lake. He develops a strong friendship with Zero. Zero is also at Camp Green Lake for stealing a pair of shoes. Both kids become friends because one's strengths is the other's weakness. They need each other to survive. Stanley knows how to read and write, but he has no physical strength. He is fat and weak. While, Zero is quick and strong, even though he does not know how to read and write.

That's why they ask for each other's help. Zero promises to help Stanley dig part of his hole each day, so that Stanley saves some of his energy to teach him how to read.

Then, Zero runs away from camp, which of course is a bad idea because he runs into the desert without any supplies. Of course, Stanley is not going to leave him alone to die in the desert, so he goes looking for him.



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