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subject: Freedom - A Amazing Portrait Of A Atomic Family In Strugglefreedom - Modern Literary Works [print this page]


A great novel about relationship issues, unrealized dreams, adolescent apostasy and what may the village think.

The writer handles in it with issues so typical that households all over the world are accustomed to accept, ensuring their "dirty laundry" is actually well stashed from the neighbors.

Just what the village may think, in the American way, is the primary power of the novel that will pay equivalent focus on marital problems, unrealized dreams, adolescent revolt, ecological problems, as well as a lot more complicated questions for example - how people see me personally as well as am I trendy enough.

The head of the Berglund family, Walt, whose personality developed first by being raised in a not very functional family, and after that thru adolescence in the shadow of a lot attractive roommate Rich, being inferior all of his existence, but concealing this with success.

In the forties finally he gets conscious that he has not moved a step forward out of early twenties geek, when he naively dreamed that the balance of power is evolving in maturity. He finds his hobby, frantically throwing himself in some ecosystem project related to protection and research study of birds, trying to prove how unique he's.

Walt's wife, Patty will also put underneath the blanket her distress from youth, to ensure that she will, in the way of Stepford wife, faking that her "Strat" life begins at the arrival of the American suburb, in which the facades hide secrets. She disrupted her career like a prospective basketball player, her parents didn't provide adequate security after the rape from the high school friend and had complex of the "ugly duckling" All of this gets unimportant after her carefully planned "challenge of being a mother."

However the world felled apart when her boy, Joey, who's more important compared to her daughter Jessica, who instead of their own loved ones selects a girl from the neighborhood and relocates together with her and her mother. However,he was residing several buildings away, yet near enough to become a constant memory of Pattys failing.

Neither to Walter nor to her, family life did not grant security as they had expected, and the inner desire for independence fortifies ...

The author successfully builds a story to a higher level, evenly thought in great detail, finally ending the story when it is most intensive.

Despite the fact that initially it would appear that Ferglund household made of passive-aggressive Walter and over protective Patty is unusual, their own problems are easy to find in every single home. Rather than sticking condemning labeling on them, we should make a list of reasons why we're individually impacted by their psychological struggle, and what similarities will we recognize?

by: timothy g green




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