Summary Of Bruiser By Neal Shusterman

691 Words3 Pages

Imagine living where whenever you got hurt physically or even mentally the pain disappeared, impossible right? Well for everyone that Brewster Rawlins cares about, this is reality. In the novel Bruiser by Neal Shusterman, Brewster cannot care about a lot of people, because when he cares about you, he takes away all of your pain and bad emotions, and it goes straight to him. In the story, many people Brew cares about realize that when Brewster takes their pain, it's like they're not living their own life, as they don't experience their own pain. With pain comes experience and life, and without pain it's like you're not even living. In the story Bruiser by Neal Shusterman, The author uses similes to portray the theme, you can't truly experience …show more content…

Cody describes holding his pain in using the simile, ”Maybe I just have to want to hold it… because as I hang here, I'm scared as anything, and I stay that way because I want to” (Shusterman 257). This crucial simile portrays the theme as it shows Cody realizes that he needs to experience his own pain to experience life. He realizes he can't keep giving Brew his pain and bad feelings, as he's not experiencing it for himself. This is the first time we see Cody hold in his pain and protect his brother. This simile shows Codys change and shows he is learning the lesson that he needs to experience his own pain to experience his life to the fullest, as he held in his feelings knowing he had to feel them for himself. The simile displays how scared Cody is and shows that he is truly learning that the must keep his own pain in to experience life. Cody didn't just turn into the ragdoll this time, he experienced his own pain and feelings and wanted to experience them for …show more content…

It was as if every muscle in his face turned to a new preset” (Shusterman 283). This key simile develops the theme further as it shows that Tennyson cannot experience his own feelings which changes how he experiences his own life. After Katrina broke up with him, he was greatly shook and he felt those feelings fully, but when Brew took them, its like he wasn't living his own life. Sadness is part of living your own life and it shapes who you are, but when Brew takes Tennyson’s bad feelings it changes him and doesn't allow him to live his life. This simile shows Tennyson's change when Brew takes his emotions and also shows that Bronte completely realizes this change in Tennyson. When Tennyson's change in his expression is compared to changing to a new preset, it helps you truly envision how Tennyson cannot experience his own pain and therefore cannot truly experience life. Without experiencing your own pain and bad feelings you can't experience life, and when Brew takes Tennyson's feelings he's not living his life and he has to keep his feelings and pain to himself in order to truly live and experience