Geoffrey S. Fletcher, an American screenwriter and film director, has always been “...interested in how innocence fares when it collides with hard reality” (Geoffrey S. Fletcher Quotes). If Fletcher wishes to examine this change of unknowingness he is interested in, the novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding, perfectly depicts how the purity of a child changes when that child is forced to face reality. Lord of the Flies is a novel about how lack of control can turn the purest beings on earth, children, into ruthless savages. A plane strands a group of boys on a deserted island, and readers observe the characters losing their incorruptibility while trying to form a coherent civilization. Advancement in maturation is shown in the novel Lord of the Flies, written by William Golding, through the loss of innocence in Jack, Piggy, and Ralph. Jack shows loss of naiveté as he progresses from a boy afraid of slaughtering a pig to a man unashamed of being responsible for the death of a child. A pig runs past Jack in the forest, but he does not go after the pig because “...of the enormity of the knife descending and cutting into living flesh…[as well as] the unbearable blood that will follow” (35). …show more content…
Loss of ingenuousness is exhibted in Jack’s transition from an average child to a ravenous, killing barbarians. The bullying and hurtfulness that Piggy faces on the island causes the loss of his innocence. Ralph loses his purity by observing how the events that take place on the island are turning it into a region of darkness and dread. Lord of the Flies is the perfect novel to satisfy Geoffrey S. Fletcher’s interest in “... how innocence fares when it collides with hard reality” because of how simplicity is destroyed in all characters once they have experienced the harsh realities that are introduced by the horrors of the island (Geoffrey S. Fletcher