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The Glass Castle By Jeannette Walls: Literary Analysis

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“1,520 children [nationally] died from abuse and neglect in 2013 [with] an average of four children dying every day from abuse or neglect,” according to the Child Welfare Information Gateway in “Child abuse and neglect fatalities 2013: Statistics and interventions.” The Glass Castle, a memoir by Jeannette Walls, depicts the harsh childhood the elder three Walls children experienced due to the choices their negligent parents made. The siblings’ childhood was unstable due to bouts of the parents’ unemployment, financial instability, and travels to new homes. The three siblings—Jeannette, Brian, and Lori—came together to survive against starvation from lack of food and to protect against getting abused by the people around them. As they grew up, they learned to support one another to …show more content…

Due to their parents’ financial instability, there wasn’t any money to buy food for the family, so the children were left to fend for themselves. Two of the siblings—Jeannette and Brian—would often search for food together, such as when they once went dumpster diving to find food and found boxes of chocolates to eat (110). As the saying goes, “two eyes are better than one”. With the combined drive to survive, they had a better chance finding food together than apart. Once when the siblings and their mother were watching a movie, Brian noticed their mother had hidden chocolate, so he “snatche[d] up the chocolate bar and divided it into four pieces” for all of his siblings, including their little sister, Maureen (174). Instead of selfishly eating it all himself like his mother did, Brian chose to share the chocolate with his siblings because he emphasized with his siblings’ struggle to find food. Had he not shared with them, there was no knowing how long until the siblings’ next “meal” would be. The siblings sticking together worked as a survival mechanism as it boosted their chance of

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