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The Good Girl Character Analysis

Decent Essays

In the book, The Good Girl, by Mary Kubica, one of the main characters, Colin Thatcher, shows a two very distinct personalities in the book. He changes throughout the book due to connections with others. Before he bonds with Mia Dennett, Colin is selfish and hostile, and manipulative. A good example of this is when the two first meet at the bar and Colin stops Mia from driving herself home while drunk, “She smiles and says that’s sweet. She thinks I care about her. Little does she know. I couldn’t care less.” (Kubica 48) Thatcher doesn’t get much better for a long while. He just continues to manipulate Mia with empty promises and half-truths. Just after this, Colin kidnaps Mia and takes her to a cabin in northern Michigan. A few months later, while they’re holed up in the cabin, Colin threatens Mia to keep her quiet after she tries to run away. “I push her up the steps, into the cabin. I slam the door shut, but it bounces back open. I kick it shut and throw the table down to keep it closed. I yank her into the bedroom and tell her that if I hear her so much as breathe she will never again see the light of day.” (Kubica 87) While he never really does anything to physically hurt Mia besides this and tripping her a couple of times here and there, Colin throws his weight around a lot in the book and uses fear to keep Mia in line. His actions and behavior start to get better throughout the book, but towards the middle, Colin reaches a kind of purgatory between scum of the earth

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