Identity crisis is a common thing among everyone. You just forget who you are without an ounce of remembrance? What makes you, you? Who really are you? Or are you someone else wanted you to be. Maybe you’re just playing the part everyone wants you to play. Ideas and thoughts like these are critical in the book “Never missing, Never found”. Scarlett is done with the past, but the past isn’t done with her… The entire story switches between 3 substories. Scarlett’s life at the amusement park, her life at the house she was kidnapped at. The last one, is enthralling. The book has an entire different universe contained within it. Both of Scarletts lifes, and the superhero story, which is heavily relying upon the renowned Marvel comics. Scarlett and Katharina. …show more content…
No one knew what was real and what was not real, Distorting their whole perspective of life forever at this point. As small is this revelation may seem, Imagine the person who you recognized to be your model for life, wasn’t who you thought them to be? You never realize how significant a situation until you are put into the perspective of others. Despite knowing who Katharina and Scarlett were, They decided that they didn’t want Katharina, and they wanted Scarlett. That was the solution to the problem. I agree with this. Even though the person you thought was your sister, that person was there for you as long as they could’ve been. And the fact that they aren’t family by blood is irrelevant. I know it may be hard to understand, but listen to this “”. The youngest child of in the family only 9 years old, Matthew, knows that Scarlett isn’t the biological sister he thought he had, because he was there the entire time, listening intently to the whole situation, but even as a kid he knows the person he loves is Scarlett, blood family or not. From this point on in the story the entire family’s perspective on both life and Scarlett was changed and corrupted