Chapter 6 & 7 "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close"

Chapter 6 is narrated by Oskar's Grandfather and he tells us in the letter what happened with Oskar's Grandmother, a completely different experience than how she described it in her letter. We can assume that this letter is from grandpa because it has the same date as the letter from grandma, not coincedetal in my opinion. We get an insight into his life as he grew up and how he met grandma through her sister, whom he orginally slept with first. We also find out that he apologizes for leaving her and their unborn child and for all the other wrong doings he has done in life. He also writes one sentence on pages, just like Oskar does when he narrates the story.

Chapter 7 goes back to Oskar narrating and it occurs when he is in the production of Hamlet. Most of the black's he has met come to the show, along with his grandma who appears to be his biggest supporter throughout the whole novel. It flashes back to when he meets more of the people with the last name black  Once again the people, including Ada and Mr. Black, have no recollection of Tomas and have no idea who he is or where that key belongs/came from. These relationships prove to be helpful for Oskar even though he has not solved the question that is at large and he feels the need to help Mr. Black leave his house after 20 years and ends up helping him hear again. There is an altercation with Oskar and his mother, proving my thought that they are in fact not as close as he was with his father, and even more distant since the death.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mini Essay Draft 3 Passengers/Wishing Well

Chapter Four & Five "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close"