Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Friendswood Questions

Question #1: Who are the main characters thus far? What quotes from the text can you use to support your answer?

Rene Steinke, the author of Friendswood uses a specific technique that easily identifies the novel's main characters; she titles each chapter with either one of three character names, Lee, Hal, or Willa, and uses whichever character's name is the title to distinguish which person that specific chapter will focus on. For example; chapter one is titled "Lee" and is based off of her experiences, while chapter two is titled "Hal" and is based off of his experiences, and so on. 

Lee: From only reading the first 30 pages of the novel, Lee is the character that seems to be the most prominent. Her character is portrayed as a preoccupied woman intent on proving to her fellow citizens that the land where the oil spill took place is still extremely toxic and unsanitary, therefore unable to safely sustain human life. Lee has sacrificed so much already to attempt to prove that the construction company should not be issued the building permit (such as run-ins with the law, illegal trespassing, etc.) that she feels she has nothing else to lose.  That being said, the multiple descriptions of her that have been stated so far portray her as a woman who has lost a sense of fear and rationality (or to put it in a 21st century term, she has taken a "yolo" approach to life).


"she stared at the dark glass in the windowpanes, not fearful because what could touch her now? but waiting, as the body of the world thrashed around her”. (page 5) ... "she had already trespassed a dozen times in broad daylight The last time she'd been chased off the property by a speeding white truck." (page 6)


Hal: Hal's character is an unhappy and ashamed real estate agent who has desperately been trying (and failing) at selling houses, and praying more and drinking less. Similarly to how Lee has been unsuccessfully attempting to prove to the construction company that the oil in the surrounding areas is still toxic, Hal continues to unsuccessfully sell houses. However, both Hal and Lee refuse to give up on the hope that one day their efforts will prove fruitful, and towards the end of each of their chapters a sense of that hope is closer than it ever has been. Lee comes across a container filled with toxic oil and eagerly snaps 22 pictures of it in the hopes that this will finally be what she needs to prove her hypothesis; likewise back at his office, Hal receives a message from a person of higher authority named Avery explaining that he would like to meet with him, and in the hopes of being offered to work with Avery, Hal is filled with the same feeling of eagerness as Lee had been. Lee and Hal's similar experiences thus far and the fact that both of them are part of ruined marriages and lost their children make them sort of foils of each other.



"he believed he needed to pray more. he needed to get rid of bad moods and doubts, especially when he was out on calls. That was the devil trying to get to him. And he'd said good riddance to the devil last year when he stopped drinking cold." (page 13)



Question #2: How is Friendswood described? What quotes from the text can you use to support your answer?

There are many ways in which Friendswood can be described at this point in the novel, however these descriptions vastly differ whether or not they are being made pre or post oil spill.


Pre Oil Spill:
Traditionally Farm-Like: 
Friendswood, before the destructive oil spill seemed to be considered a peaceful, quiet area filled with close knit families and neighbors who had long established roots in their small town. The prelude's description of Friendswood paints the exact image one would expect to see when driving through the country side and coming across a stereotypical small farm town.

"they turned the corner and the sunset spread before them, two sparrows perched on a fence, radio jangling out of someone’s window(prelude)...“she took off her shoes to feel her feet in the grass, and she looked out at Banes field, scrub weeds and stooped trees. The old, defunct refinery still stood there, as if there might be some reward in the futility of it; the small plane flew low now above the flat warehouse and white cylinder oil tank.” (prelude)



Post Oil Spill:
A Place of Recovery: 
As shown through the church donation center and the progressive reconstruction of dilapidated buildings and houses, Friendswood after the oil spill is in a state of much needed recovery, and it seems as though while most of the emphasis is on the gloom and duress of it's residents, there still remains a glisten of hope (regardless of how dim the glisten) in Friendswood. 

it was sunny again for the first time in days, and light mirrored off all the wet surfaces. Post-storm, people drove slowly, traffic was sparse. Here and there fallen branches and toppled signs lay on either side of the road, but things were getting back to normal.” (p.3) “the Welcome to Friendswood sign blown down, the roof vanisophed from the German bakery, gray water flooding the low-lying parking lot of the bank.” (pg. 4)


A Place that had Given up
While recovery is most definitely on the minds of all of the Friendswood residents, they seem to have taken a lackluster, lazy, and distanced approach to solving their problems. They are aware that Friendswood is in dire need of help, but they simply think about or hope that improvement will come rather than acting upon it. 

"Lee kept to this unwooded side of Tubb Gully, closer to where they’d buried the chemicals years ago in a number of truck-sized vinyl containers, no better than giant Tupperware, really.” (pg. 7) “there was a goddamn drought of common sense around here. Too many people just wanted to fail.” (pg. 18)

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