Toby has lived in Seattle for sometime where he got into a bad pattern of stealing and various other offenses. Toby's mother soon after met a man named Dwight, eventually they got married and his life in Seattle was basically forgotten. He began another chapter in his life in Chinook, a small town outside of Seattle. His offenses committed in Seattle began to follow him he could not help but steal. Dwight lacks a decent amount of respect for Toby; he contemplates leaving all of the time. He has made several attempts to flee his current situation, he dreams to go to Alaska.
-Moses Allred
Friday, October 23, 2009
Word Watch
These are some words I didn't know while reading:
Apoplectic- intense enough to threaten or cause apoplexy.
Ululating- to utter howling sounds, as in shrill, wordless lamentation; wail.
Enumerated- to ascertain the number of; count.
Epitaph- a brief poem or other writing in praise of a deceased person.
Pensive- expressing or revealing thoughtfulness, usually marked by some sadness: a pensive
adagio.
Incredulity- the quality or state of being incredulous; inability or unwillingness to believe.
-Moses Allred
Apoplectic- intense enough to threaten or cause apoplexy.
Ululating- to utter howling sounds, as in shrill, wordless lamentation; wail.
Enumerated- to ascertain the number of; count.
Epitaph- a brief poem or other writing in praise of a deceased person.
Pensive- expressing or revealing thoughtfulness, usually marked by some sadness: a pensive
adagio.
Incredulity- the quality or state of being incredulous; inability or unwillingness to believe.
-Moses Allred
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Discussion Starter
I noticed that Jack is looking for the opportunity to recreate himself, something he does in his fantasies throughout the book. Away from the people who have judged him, Jack hopes that he can prove himself to be different than the boy he was in Seattle, running with a dangerous crowd and wreaking havoc with the police and people at school. Jack believes "no obstacle to miraculous change but the incredulity of others," and this belief that he can be somebody different both scares and pushes Jack to do better.
Do you think by the end of the book Jack will change his ways and be the person he wants to become, despite what the world has set for him?
- Maggie Todaro
Do you think by the end of the book Jack will change his ways and be the person he wants to become, despite what the world has set for him?
- Maggie Todaro
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Illumination
"I was subject to fits of feeling myself unworthy…. It didn't take much to bring this sensation to life, along with the certainty that everybody but my mother saw through me and did not like what they saw."
This quote from the book explains Jack's feelings of guilt in Part One, Chapter 2. Throughout Jack's childhood, he is consistently having feelings of unworthiness. He is convinced that he is guilty for things he does not have control over, like being abandonded by his father and his mother's tendancy to be involved with abusive men.
- Maggie Todaro
This quote from the book explains Jack's feelings of guilt in Part One, Chapter 2. Throughout Jack's childhood, he is consistently having feelings of unworthiness. He is convinced that he is guilty for things he does not have control over, like being abandonded by his father and his mother's tendancy to be involved with abusive men.
- Maggie Todaro
Connection
The reader gains vital insight into the relationship between Jack and his mother at the close of Chapter 2. When Rosemary returns, crying, from her date with Gil, Jack immediately notices his mother's pain tries to soothe it by rocking her in his arms. In this situation, Jack plays the parent to his own mother, and is forced to use more maturity than is required of a young boy. This shows that Jack and his mother depend on one another. Jack also notices that his mother's need for him makes him feel "capable." This feeling makes Jack feel like he's doing something good, and that his being holds a purpose.
This part of the book tells you somthing about Rosemary. In her state of weakness, she is submissive to Jack, just as she has been submissive to Gil, Roy, and Jack's father. She seems to have a submission to men, a trait that she probably acquired from her childhood, when her father used to beat her.
-Maggie Todaro
This part of the book tells you somthing about Rosemary. In her state of weakness, she is submissive to Jack, just as she has been submissive to Gil, Roy, and Jack's father. She seems to have a submission to men, a trait that she probably acquired from her childhood, when her father used to beat her.
-Maggie Todaro
Illustration

On the run from an abusive boyfriend, Wolff and his mother got off a bus in the Seattle area, and tried to make a new life in western Washington. This image of a Concrete, Washington welcoming sign reminded me of the book. I think that maybe when arriving, Wolff and his mother feel welcomed to the idea of a new life in this new place.
How do you think they feel when they first arrive in Washington? Scared/excited/nervous?
- Maggie Todaro
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Discussion Topic
What do you think about Jack's self-control and how he feels about himself?
Comment with what YOU think:
To me, it seems like he doesn't think he is capable of doing anything. Jack also clearly has no control over himself, and this lack of self-control is exactly what scares Jack most of all about the rifle he gets. When he killed the squirrel, Jack he discovered a part of himself that has potential to harm others. Throughout the book, i've noticed that there are many instances in which Jack's thoughts conflict with his behavior, and these instances are typically followed by guilt, an apolegetic feeling and self-examination.
- Maggie Todaro
Comment with what YOU think:
To me, it seems like he doesn't think he is capable of doing anything. Jack also clearly has no control over himself, and this lack of self-control is exactly what scares Jack most of all about the rifle he gets. When he killed the squirrel, Jack he discovered a part of himself that has potential to harm others. Throughout the book, i've noticed that there are many instances in which Jack's thoughts conflict with his behavior, and these instances are typically followed by guilt, an apolegetic feeling and self-examination.
- Maggie Todaro
Word Watcher
I was completely unfamiliar with these words, They seemed almost foreign to me. I think that i did not recognize these because of the time period (1950's).
Taciturn- temperamentally disinclined to talk.
penance- an act of self-abasement, mortification, or devotion performed to show sorrow or repentance for sin.
sepulchral- a receptacle for religious relics especially in an altar.
strident- characterized by harsh, insistent, and discordant sound.
Chinook- a member of an American Indian people of the north shore of the Columbia River at its mouth.
rhododendron- any of a genus (Rhododendron) of widely cultivated shrubs.
- Moses Allred
Taciturn- temperamentally disinclined to talk.
penance- an act of self-abasement, mortification, or devotion performed to show sorrow or repentance for sin.
sepulchral- a receptacle for religious relics especially in an altar.
strident- characterized by harsh, insistent, and discordant sound.
Chinook- a member of an American Indian people of the north shore of the Columbia River at its mouth.
rhododendron- any of a genus (Rhododendron) of widely cultivated shrubs.
- Moses Allred
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Summary
Summary
Of what I have read so far I recieved a great amount of information about where the story is going. In the story the main character Toby Wolf is a child of divorce, he lives with his mother who moves him in many different residendes. The story is baised around the effects, and what it causes him to do. this story takes place during the 1950's this has a great deal with the way the character thinks, He has so far had an almost violent streak, a obsession with weapons.
- Moses Allred
Of what I have read so far I recieved a great amount of information about where the story is going. In the story the main character Toby Wolf is a child of divorce, he lives with his mother who moves him in many different residendes. The story is baised around the effects, and what it causes him to do. this story takes place during the 1950's this has a great deal with the way the character thinks, He has so far had an almost violent streak, a obsession with weapons.
- Moses Allred
Friday, October 9, 2009
Roles
Maggie - Discussion Director
Lefki - Illustrator
James - Connector
Michael - Illuminator
Moses - Word Watcher/ Summarizer
Reading Pace: 25 pages per night
Due Dates:
Sunday 10/11
-Moses: Summary
-Lefki: Illustration
Tuesday 10/13
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
Thursday 10/15
-Moses: Word Watch
Saturday 10/17
-Lefki: Illustration
-James: Connection
-Michael - Illumination
Tuesday 10/20
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
-Moses: Summary/ Word Watch
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Lefki: Illustration
Saturday 10/24
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
-Moses: Summary/ Word Watch
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Lefki: Illustration
Tuesday 10/27 (FINAL)
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
-Moses: Summary/ Word Watch
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Lefki: Illustration
Lefki - Illustrator
James - Connector
Michael - Illuminator
Moses - Word Watcher/ Summarizer
Reading Pace: 25 pages per night
Due Dates:
Sunday 10/11
-Moses: Summary
-Lefki: Illustration
Tuesday 10/13
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
Thursday 10/15
-Moses: Word Watch
Saturday 10/17
-Lefki: Illustration
-James: Connection
-Michael - Illumination
Tuesday 10/20
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
-Moses: Summary/ Word Watch
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Lefki: Illustration
Saturday 10/24
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
-Moses: Summary/ Word Watch
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Lefki: Illustration
Tuesday 10/27 (FINAL)
-Maggie: Discussion Starter
-Moses: Summary/ Word Watch
-James: Connection
-Michael: Illumination
-Lefki: Illustration
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)