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Tuesday, November 1, 2016

A&P - John Updike

In John Updikes, A & P, the author introduces a new boy, Sammy, trying to figure stunned if there is more for himself. He wishings to change the way he does and commands things. A & P, is about initiation. Sammy goes from ingenuousness and ignorance, to matureness and wisdom. Lacking the maturity to live with the worlds injustices, Sammy acted irrationally and lost everything, draw maybe himself. A & P, represents a coming-of-age floor for Sammy.\nEverything in this stage happens over just a couple of minutes, but it in time shows a great regale of maturity. The entire time that the gathering of girls is in the bloodline, you can see changes in Sammy. When they first passing play in all he notices is their corporeal features. As the story goes on, he starts to grow up. He notices the interactions of the girls, instead of just their physical features. He starts to notice that the girls be not comparable the regulars that contend through the store daily, with the hire same routine. The girls are unalike and dont follow a apparel routine. They seem to do what they want, when they want, and its no problem for them. He appreciates their erraticness, and doesnt want to discourage it and doesnt like that other adults do. When the girls were confronted by the store jitney, and talked to about their inappropriate appearance. Sammy entangle as if the manager was wrong, and rude(a) for embarrassing the girls.\nWhen the manager makes his comment, Sammy doesnt palpate as if he is ripe or okay with how the manager treated them. Sammy starts to feel as if there is something out there that is better for him. Sammy wants to be unique, or just as unique as the girls that he finds absorbing are. The girls are different, and thats what Sammy seems to love and entertain about them. Sammy has made a decision that he doesnt want to be like his manager, or any of the adults who are opinion the girls in that store, and he emphatically doesnt want to be ap proximately them. \nSam...

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