Have you ever been in a situation where you felt you changed and had to grow up? Felt like you went from being an innocent child to knowing or doing something that changed your childhood innocence. The Outsiders by S.E Hinton,is a book about two rival gangs/sides. The Socs are a group of boys from the west side and are wealthy. On the otherside are the Greasers,a group of boys from the east side who are not wealthy and are at war with the socs. The main character,Ponyboy is a member of the Greasers who lives with his two brothers Darry and Sodapop, also members of the Greasers. One day coming from the movie theater ponyboy is jumped by the socs in their red corvair. The fighting continues leading up to the all mighty rumble. In the outsiders By S.E Hinton Childhood Innocence disappears from the character by their actions and the environment they are in. Johnny kills Bob which turns him from an innocent child to a criminal. In the book Johnny says "Calm down, Ponyboy. Get ahold of yourself." and also says "I had to. They were drowning you, Pony. …show more content…
“Darry didn't deserve to work like an old man when he was only twenty. He had been a really popular guy in school; he was captain of the football team and he had been voted Boy of the Year.... But we just didn't have the money for him to go to college, even with the athletic scholarship he won. And now he didn't have time between jobs to even think about college”(pg.16) This quote shows that Darry sacrificed and even gave up his career to take care of his family as the “Man of the house” Darry couldn't pay tuition,and couldn't go to college. Darry had two younger brothers who he had to fill in the role of a guardian for them as their parents were now gone. This further shows and proves that Darry left his childhood innocence because he had to step up for his family and take care of them, forcing him to grow
Darry’s athleticism allows him and his brothers to live a safer
What this shows is that Darry would beat up Dally if he got found out that Dally got Ponyboy and Johnny out of town with money and a gun, which means that all he is doing is sticking up for his brothers. He doesn’t want them to get into any trouble or run away.
The Outsiders is a book by S.E. Hinton. A group of people called the Greasers are the main characters. There names are Dally, Sodapop, Ponyboy, Darry, Steve, Two-Bit, and Johnny. In the book they all have rough lives, some don’t even have parents. Ponyboy and Johnny get it trouble in the middle of the book and they have to go away to a church were later is the cause of Ponyboy, Johnny, and Dallas’s injuries.
Daryy’s parents passed which held Darry responsible for caring and protecting his brothers which as a result led to Darry growing up too fast. In support, “Darry gone through a lot in his 20 years, grown up too fast.” Additionally, when Ponyboy and Johnny needed help, Dally provided them with solid help for them to escape the police. As it states, “Hope the three- fifteen freight to Windrixville,” Dally instructed. “There’s an abandoned church on top of Jay Mountain.
I had known it all the time, even while I was sick and pretending he wasn’t. It was Johnny, not me, who had killed Bob-I knew that too. I had just thought that maybe if I played like Johnny wasn’t dead it wouldn’t hurt so much” (177). Ponyboy was aware of the death of Johnny, the murder of Bob, and his denial of the two. The only thing he wasn't
But then, Darry’s gone through a lot in his twenty years, grown up too fast.” This shows that he had to take care of his siblings when his parents had died. Darry is also a hero when he took care of Ponyboy when he was sick. According to the text on page 160 it says “ He crawled over me and flopped down and before Darry came back in with the soup we were both asleep.”
For someone to be considered a hero they need to show courage and leadership and that is just what Darry shows. After Darry, Ponyboy, and Soda’s parents die Darry has to give up going to college in order to stay with Ponyboy and Soda. After he does this he also has to get two jobs just to support the family. The author states “ and Darry, getting old before his time trying to run a family
The novel’s outsiders explore the challenges faced by Ponyboy Curtis and his fellow gang members, the Greasers. Throughout the novel, Ponyboy undergoes significant character development as he struggles with violence, stereotypes, and the loss of innocence. As the novel progresses, the Greasers face conflict with their rivals, the Socs. This has a significant impact on Ponyboy, as he questions the point of violence between the two groups. In Chapter 7, Randy has a conversation with Ponyboy and says he is "not going to show up at the rumble" because he is sick and tired of all the fighting.
Jonny Cade and Ponyboy Curtis, the two main characters in S.E. Hinton's novel "The Outsiders," share similar struggles but differ in their personalities and worldviews. Despite their different personalities, Jonny and Ponyboy share several similarities. Firstly, both characters come from difficult family backgrounds. Ponyboy's parents have passed away, and he lives with his two older brothers who struggle to provide for him.
First, Darry instills a sense of responsibility and maturity in the gang. He is the one who takes care of his brothers and ensures that they are safe and well-cared for. Darry often acts as a parental figure to the gang, making sure
According to the book, on page seventy-five, Dally said, “Shoot my old man don’t give a hang whether I’m, in jail or dead or in a car wreck or drunk in the Gutter. That don’t bother me no more.” Based on this quote, when Dally was younger, he never felt loved by his parents. Dally’s parents are the main reason Dally became the person he was. Instead of being good parents, they constantly neglected Dally.
He keeps the family together and out of trouble by making sure that they stay at home on weekdays, and only lets them go out on weekends. Darry is one of the most heroic characters in the book The
After Johnny offers to turn himself in so that Ponyboy doesn’t get into trouble they go back to the church that they are staying at and find it in flames. There were children inside so Johnny and Ponyboy went inside and saved them but while doing so Johnny got hit by a piece of wood on fire. He then dies in hospital. This is shown when Johnny says ““You still have a lot of time to make yourself be what you want. There’s still a lot of good in the world.”
In this book report I will talk about the book “The outsiders” written by S.E. Hinton, I will do a review of the story, the point of view, theme, symbols and my opinion about this book I really liked to read for the English class. The story is about a boy named Ponyboy who lived in a small town in Texas with his two brothers Darry and Sodapop were a gang war was taking place between two different social class people: The Socs and the Greasers. Ponyboy will learn the consequences bad acts can bring to your life in the middle of a gang war. The greasers were a middle class and not so social kind of people who liked to get in trouble and The other gang The Socs were a most of them a high class or middle-high class group of people who where they went they will always go in groups of like three or four people.
Given Darry’s accomplishments, it is clear that he would have been a fantastic student and would have made his parents proud. Coming from a working class background, he would very likely have been the first person in his family to go to college, serving a role model for his younger brothers. Despite his parent 's death, Darry could have forgone his responsibilities, since he is an adult and still attend college, leaving his brothers to survive on their own in foster care, or a boys’ home. However, he does not take this option and instead, Darry assumes