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The House Of The Scorpions Analysis

900 Words4 Pages

People backstab one another. One minute, people lay on the solid ground with everything they could imagine, and the next minute, people don’t even recognize what their world used to be. This is exactly how most felt from El Patrón. In the book The House of the Scorpions, El Patrón is a wealthy drug lord who retains all the treasures that anyone could desire in the universe--except for everlasting life. To solve this problem, El Patrón creates clones, and his most recent clone is Matt Alacrán. El Patrón treats Matt like a King, up until he some point of his life during the age of 14, where shocking events change the course of the entire book! In this book, El Patrón preys on the blind loyalty of the members of his estate by giving his family …show more content…

When the author describes the house on page twenty to twenty-one, he states “They started up a wide marble staircase. . . . Lights outlined the white wall of a vast house above, with pillars and statues and doorways going who knew where. The maids opened a door to reveal the most beautiful room . . . . It had beautiful wooden beams on the ceiling and wallpaper decorated with hundreds of birds. [Matt] saw a couch upholstered with flowers that shaded from lavender to rose. . . .” One clearly can see that this description shows marvelous detail and expensive decor on both the interior and exterior of the house. Showing how well El Patrón treated his family, his household would be extremely loyal to him seeing how high El Patrón thinks of them. His family was comfortable and they had nothing to worry about. They never thought that El Patrón would ever punish or intentionally be gruesome to them. Consequently though, when El Patrón dies, it was a shock that he had poisoned the wine that the recipients drank at his wake. When El Patrón does this action, he took everyone by surprise. No guest at his burial tomb never even considered that El Patrón would kill his own bloodline. This can all be identified on page 375 when the text states, “Everyone cheered and then drank [wine] --except me. Before the next minute had passed, they had all fallen to the ground [from poison].” This small blurb clearly indicates that the family members of El Patrón never contemplated the idea that the wine was poisoned by El Patrón. Before they drank the wine too, the group talked about selling his belongings the next day. They never did expect El Patón to turn on them. El Patrón simply did not want anyone to live on his estate if he wasn’t there. He manipulated the family into believing that they were safe, when in reality though, they never were. This undoubtedly shows how

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