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The Importance Of Life In The Glass Castle By Jeanette Walls

495 Words2 Pages

The Walls family lived a nomadic lifestyle, never staying in one sport for long. Each location, whether Phoenix, Las Vegas or others, impacted their life in important ways. The learned many life lessons along the way. However, not every location had the same lasting impact. In the memoir, The Glass Castle, Jeanette Walls, the author, was most influenced by her time in Battle Mountain, as indicated by her sense of home and the harsher life she experience there. Battle Mountain was the first place Jeanette felt a sense of home. They had been staying in the house for a while, actually, “nearly as year, and I considered it home--the first real home I could remember” (81). Jeanette and her siblings all felt like this and it impacted her life greatly. This definity benefited her life. She learned how to innovate furniture using large spools. They, also, took in animals and nursed them back to health using scraps of leftover food. Therefore, Battle Mountain was important because its overall sense of home. …show more content…

After Rex lost his job, the family continued to live there (even with no financial backing). Rex told his kids that “he had all sorts of plans to make money” (67). However, this was only partially true. Rex would go out and spend large amounts of it on booze. Without a steady income, this lifestyle left the family on no food most days. This, however, led to the mother getting a teaching job. This impacted Rose Mary very hard because it proved her mother right because Rose Mary could not support herself on Art. Her teaching profession furthermore influenced her children. Due to the mother’s disorganized way of life, each child took on a responsibility for their parents. From organizing lesson plans to cleaning the classroom, the children would do it. This taught the children responsibility and the power of dividing task to get things done. This, in turn, impacted their

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