In W.D Wetherell’s short story, “ The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant”, the narrator is put into a position on which he has to give up on one of many things he care mostly about. Does he give up on Sheila Mant, the girl he had a crush on over the summer, or the biggest bass he had ever hooked? The narrator is challenged to complete the multiple obstacles of his desire, however in the end he obtained a life-time lesson. A lesson in which he learned that in life he will come upon many women, but the one that appreciate his true identity is the one worth sacrificing for. For instance, the narrator displayed his knowledge about bass and hope his intelligence would impress Sheila. In reality he felt like a fool after she commented, “ I think fishing’s dumb.” The narrator also mentioned he would’ve …show more content…
Throughout the story, the narrator is trying his best to hide his fishing equipment so Sheila wouldn’t find out that the narrator actually enjoyed fishing. His attempted to hide his identity on being a fisherman will later on reflects his realization on how useless it was to impress a woman, who has a strong hatred toward fishing. Therefore, fishing is really important to the narrator but Sheila, who thought it was dumb, made it seems as if the narrator and fishing are useless and not something to care so much about. To enumerate, after giving up his bass; the narrator rarely saw Sheila at the beach and only got to dance with her once or twice. But one thing he remembered the most was when Sheila told him she was going home in Eric Caswell’s Corvette. The narrator realized Sheila did not have any interested in him and also during the boat ride; she would talked about random subjects (the narrator could not care less) and Eric would pop in the subject here and there. It’s evident that Sheila did not see the narrator attempts and message toward her about his