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Theme Of Red Convertible

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The Red Convertible In the “Red Convertible” by Louise Erdrich the theme is evident. Throughout the story he shows that situations in can have life altering effects. Erdrich takes the reader on a journey of two brothers whose names were Lyman and Henry. He covers us from the time they buy their first car, to the time of the death of Henry, the older brother. He uses a myriad of literary devices to bring the story across. Erdrich used the reservation as the setting because it foreshadows the loneliness that each character experiences. In addition, he uses the reservation to symbolize the hardship and loneliness of life in the Lyman and Henry. He uses the red convertible to symbolize the journey that each brother went through. In addition, …show more content…

After the war he was silent, got distracted easily and was reserved. Erdrich describes that he was as quite, and was “never comfortable sitting still anywhere but he always up moving around. (pg 4)”. Lyman is very distraught at this change and would do anything to have his brother back. Therefore, he plans to mess up the car because of an earlier conversation with his family which expressed that the doctors could not cure him “they will just give them drugs (5).” This shows the lack of faith the Indians has in doctors. As a result, he destroyed the car he kept in tip top condition. Erdrich describes Lyman ruining the car, he “whacked it up, bent the pipe tail, ripped the muffler loose…I made it look as beat up as I could” (5). Fortunately, his plan workes. It took Henry over a month to find the car, but Lyman was okay with that because it was getting warm enough for Henry to start working on it. Lyman states that “Henry was better than he had been before” but that is an understatement. Even though, “he ate more slowly and didn’t jump around during a meal… or look out the window (5)”, Lyman was unsatisfied with the results. He states “feeling down in the dumps about his brother, before the war they had always been henry and Lyman, but he was such a loner now. (6)” His very plan was crumbling before his eyes. No matter how hard Lyman tries he could not fully recover his long-lost brother. As a result, of his plan, one can assume that Lyman felt neglected.

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