Preview

Powder

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
627 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Powder
“Powder”

"Powder," by Tobias Wolff, is about a man recalling his memory of a specific ski trip taken with his father, at a time when his parent's were on the verge of divorce. He recounts the day with vivid detail, telling us the reasons why his parents divorce was imminent, but also how much he loves his father despite his faults.

The boy conveys his controlling behavior to the point of numbering his clothes to ensure rotation, and asking for school assignments well in advance so that he can make up schedules; in short, he plans everything in his life that he can possibly have control over because of he cannot do anything about his family's situation. His father is remembered as an irresponsible man who unintentionally causes problems for his son through his consistently careless actions. The boy realizes he is the complete opposite of his father's personality, but admires the older man's ability to live in the moment, without worrying over consequences.

The separation of the boy's parents which is leading to the inevitable divorce is the root of the conflict. His father does not help matters with his actions, as in taking the boy to bars previously against his mother's will, and keeping him late this particular Christmas Eve, skiing longer than they should have which leads to being snowed in on the mountain, because the road home is closed due to adverse weather. The father comments that the boy's mother will not forgive him if he does not deliver the boy home in time for dinner. Showing determination, thus planting the seed that he truly does care to make things right with both his son and wife, he breaks the law by passing through a road block put up by local police and makes a fearless run down the mountain road covered with fresh powder from the snowstorm. The boy is filled with worry over the consequences waiting for them at the bottom, but is not afraid for their safety because he trusts his father's driving skills. This is the turning point that

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Wolff’s memoir “This Boy’s life” examines how life challenges can shape ones Identity. The memoir explores how determination is fuelled by hardship and that resourcefulness is essential in overcoming life’s obstacles. Besides the many difficulties Jack and Rosemary face, these difficulties are what ignites their motivation to transform their lives.…

    • 692 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Clay Boy Conflicts

    • 555 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In this story, Clay Boy experience lots of conflicts and one of them is when Clay Boy goes fine his father his father in the black church. When he enters the church everybody stares at him. When he starts walking he notices that he doesn’t know anybody in the church until, the pastier sees him and Clay Boy remembers him. When the people stared singing the song he knew the song and he wanted to sing but all he did was look at the kid next to him. When they were done singing they people made a play talking about how Jesus was born and after that Santa clause was giving people oranges and when he got to clay boy he was thinking about his dad that he said that to never take charity from people.…

    • 555 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The poor boy earns his own money in order to play sports as a child. He plays on the hockey team and creates his own baseball and cricket team. He organizes games against other parts of town. While the other boys in the community played with slingshots and hunted birds or squirrels, “he hunted the neighbor’s windows, porch flower pots, and the lights that shone near his street” (8) but he didn’t harm any animals. When the narrator took him to the movies the boy left him to be with other friends. To the surprise of the reader and the narrator he came back to watch the movie with his friend. During the movie the boy admits to the narrator that he snuck into the movie theatre that the narrator’s father owns, without paying. The narrator admits to doing the same thing at the ice rink and a bond forms between them. This is when the boy’s life begins to spiral downwards.…

    • 599 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Johnny Tremain Analysis

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Johnny Tremain shows the changes of a young boy to a young man. You can see that he matured in very significant areas of his life. Which ones exactly/ He understands life better and is ready to be a responsible young adult. He realizes that these traits make him a better person.…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This Boy's Life, set in America in the 1950’s, is a compelling memoir by Tobias Wolff, whom recreates the frustrations and cruelties faced throughout his adolescence, as he fights for identity and self-respect. During this period of time, America underwent major changes in the political and economic spheres, which in turn were responsible for its social makeover. Society in this time was geared toward family; marriage and children being part of the national agenda. The 1950’s was also an age of male dominance, where even if women worked, their assumed proper place was at home. Throughout the memoir, the protagonist, young Jack Wolff, makes it difficult for the reader to feel much affection towards him, as his actions prove to be troublesome and unruly. However, as the memoir progresses, Jacks struggle reveal the reasons for his actions which sequentially shape his character, providing the readers with understanding and sympathy towards his inexorable situation. The fraudulent lies and deceitful ways of Jack can be frustrating upon the reader; though we come to realise that he does this in order to be accepted by the people around him. Jack also engages in fights and unfaithfully betrays his best friend Arthur, although it becomes evident that he only does this in order to gain Dwight’s approval of him. The lack of a real father figure in Jack’s life has a profound impact on him and his desperate attempt to develop his identity, which further supports the readers’ emotions of sympathy towards him.…

    • 1592 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    It is difficult to make the transition from being constantly dependant on your parents to trying to be independant. This is the time where you find yourself and you get into your own routine on how you want to do everything. Gene now has a decent job as a millwright which is someone who builds and maintains machinery. Gene knows that he made mistakes in college. He regrets not caring so much about school but does not wish to change anything.…

    • 822 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    With the daunting task of facing a derelict, volatile world, an eight-year-old boy manages the unthinkable - survival. Cormac McCarthy illustrates how the boy in The Road encounters many obstacles during his childhood, and in spite of these hardships, resists numerous temptations to give up in life. The combination of growing up in a dysfunctional family as well as a bleak, barren, cataclysmic environment affects his psychological and physical development and makes his life extremely difficult to bear. The environment in which the boy inhabits is nothing short of hellish. As stated by Janet Maslin in her criticism of The Road, “the boy was born a few days after [the mother] and [father] ‘watched distant cities burn.’” (Maslin 2). The boy grows…

    • 2407 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Other Wes Moore essay

    • 1321 Words
    • 4 Pages

    While the environments that both boys grew up in were similar, there are key differences that influenced each Wes Moore into making different decisions later in their lives. The book begins with a discussion of their fathers; the author Wes Moore, although for a short time in his life, had a loving father who was involved and active. The other Wes Moore, however, had an alcoholic father who was absent his entire life, not bothering to get involved with his son. The second Wes Moore, unlike the author of this novel, never had a father figure and the only male role model he had was his elder brother who eventually dropped out of school to sell drugs. Both boys were also raised by their mothers but were raised in entirely different matters. Joy was a hardworking, strong and independent woman who had an education and grew up in a disciplined and structured environment. Joy was determined to provide the same for her three children, going as far as moving in with her parents and working multiple jobs to allow her children to go to private school instead of the failing public schools of the Bronx. Joy and Wes’ grandparents were strict and provided a stable household with high expectations and respect for rules and severe punishments for breaking those rules. For example, when Wes started to fail in school and did not improve his grades or his behavior his mother sent him to military school. Joy was a strict disciplinarian. Mary, the mother of the other Wes Moore, was not a strict disciplinarian and did not grow up in a stable environment. Mary’s mother died when she…

    • 1321 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Wes moores were both surviving in the position of low income and lived in a perilous neighborhood. The Wes Moores both had no father in their life for long after growing up, which is mainly hard for a maturing boy. The boys were in tricky situations which eventually steered them down a path including them getting into lots of trouble. For example, the Other Wes Moore was looking so hard for a father figure in his life he turned to his brother for motivation. The author remarks, “Wes wanted to be just like Tony. Tony wanted Wes to be nothing like him” (Moore 72). Tony was not the best role model for Wes, but he had no one else to look up to. The Wes’s upbringing impacted their lives greatly but it’s their own choice in how they want…

    • 512 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    By trying to find his future Ben only manages to make it even worse by getting sexually involved with Mrs. Robinson. When asked what he is going to do with his life, he simply replies that he doesn’t know but he wants it to be different. Ben is sent down a perplexing path of confusion and he tries a few outlets to help him find the answer to his future. Aside from Ben searching for his future, he is also seeking independence. Ben discovers that only he can break the cycle his parents have created over the entirety of his…

    • 432 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Andrew’s younger years, Bauer describes her son with some normal and eccentric qualities. He had no problem with being educated in the classroom, but lacked other skills. “The things he couldn’t…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Black Boy Essay

    • 671 Words
    • 3 Pages

    A completely different world in which a present day teenagers mind will never be able to grasp, is the kind of place in which Richard’s life revolved around in the book Black Boy by Richard Wright. A lot has change during the century in which Richards was shaped up in and the one in which this youth lives now. He lived a harsh live in where everybody was his enemy with the exception of his own mother and brother. He had to plan out every movement he made and thing he said…

    • 671 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Among any of the main events such as encounters with other people, the survivalist character of the father is shown, which is only contradicted by the boy, who resembles the Father 's morality. With this contradiction, there is an spark of internal conflict in the man raising several questions. The most important of these is perhaps how important it is for the boy to learn ethics and human morality. There is a part of the man that wants to believe that the world, though thrown into an utterly irreversible disaster , will still live on in its natural state before the occurrence of this apocalyptic disaster, yet there is another part that wishes for the goodwill of his son, which can only be accomplished by teaching him proper…

    • 726 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Powder by Tobias Wolff

    • 609 Words
    • 3 Pages

    There are only two major characters in the story—the teenaged narrator and his father, and everything takes place within the area of Mount Baker, a skiing resort. The fact that the boy’s parents were on the verge of divorce is established early on, and some of the implied reasons lie in the father’s character. Three descriptions were used in the first few paragraphs of the story that alluded to the father—“he had to fight for the privilege”, “he wouldn’t give up”, and “he was indifferent to my fretting”. These three descriptive phrases convey a picture of a man with an aggressive nature, and would always pursue what he wants; this is proven by his keeping the flashy Austin-Healey, by insisting on taking his son to a club, and by being focused on bringing him home—so as not to get his wife’s ire, for he believes they would still be able to patch things up. At the end of the story, it is the son himself who uses several adjectives on his father—“rumpled, kind, bankrupt of honor, flushed with certainty. He was a great driver. All persuasion, nor coercion.” After reading the story in its entirety, one would be able to associate the seemingly carefree and spontaneous characterization of the father to his being a man of gentle manner, yet gregarious tone; what his son lacked in youthfulness and spirit, he completely made up for.…

    • 609 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Stephen Dedalus, the main character, is what many would consider a typical boy with a normal childhood. His family loves him and they support him with essentially anything he would need. Stephen is taught well as a young boy whose parents grapple with many problems for themselves, yet always seem to show the difference between right and wrong. As Stephen grows older his family’s struggles become his own problem whenever finances force them to move, therefore making Stephen the new kid at school.”No life or youth stirred in him as it had stirred in [his father and his friends]. He had known neither the pleasure of companionship with others nor the vigour of rude male health nor filial piety. Nothing stirred within his soul but a cold and cruel and loveless lust. His childhood was dead or lost and with it his soul capable of simple joys and he was drifting amid life like the barren shell of the moon.”(76) School shows to be a challenge in itself as he has problems fitting in, but eventually he finds his place in the “social circle”. As Stephen grows even older and moving now into his teenage years family is becoming one of his lesser problems. Although his family may not always physically be there, Stephen has roots for…

    • 921 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays