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“Another school year. No way out.
He slogged through a couple of hours of first-day science and math, the air pressing in hotter and heavier, the walls closing around him. Fourth period was a short one, only thirty minutes. He had reading in Room 134. He hadn’t had reading as a separate class since fifth grade.
He stopped in the doorway of the classroom. The entire back wall of the room was a built-in bookshelf, loaded with books. Bookshelves lined the opposite wall. No windows. The ceiling looked lower, the walls closer, than in the other rooms.
Travis backed out, dropped his pencil and notebook in his locker, and headed for the double doors and the rays of sunlight. He pushed the door open, feet moving without stopping.”
This passage introduces Travis’s intense dislike of school, especially Reading, although it doesn’t fully divulge the reasons why Travis dislikes school. The reader, like Velveeta, is given clues little by little until they can solve the mystery behind Travis’s aversion to school. Here, the fact that he dislikes Reading more than other classes and feels claustrophobic in the Reading classroom starts to clue the reader into the fact that Travis struggles to read.
“‘Get in the truck.’ Grandpa flicked his cigarette butt on the ground. ‘Unless you know someone else who’s going to buy your food and put a roof over your head.’
And because Travis didn’t know anyone like that, he followed Grandpa across the road and got in.”
This passage illustrates the precarious position of children: They usually must obey their guardians because the guardians control their access to food, shelter, and other necessities. Although Travis is often resistant to Grandpa and other authority figures, Grandpa still holds a trump card, and Travis concedes when it’s absolutely necessary.
“Remember how you said there’s only two stories: someone goes on a trip or a stranger comes to town? Remember how I went crazy for days, trying to think of a movie that wasn’t either of those to prove you wrong? And no matter what I came up with, you figured out some way to make it one of those.
There’s a stranger in town, and if you were here asking me ‘How was school?’ and pushing for details every day like you used to, I’d be telling you about him. But you’re not here. It’s two and a half weeks now of you being more not here every day.
[…] It makes me feel better, though, coming here after school. Like maybe you’re on a long vacation and you’ll be home soon. Nothing wrong with pretending, right? Like The Muppet Movie song, remember? Life’s like a movie, write your own ending…
Because I gotta say, I don’t like the way this movie is going lately. We need a better writer.”
This passage describes how books, movies, and stories resemble real life. This is related to the reason why Travis ultimately decides to learn to read: He discovers that stories have the power to share wisdom about life. Velveeta already knows this, and even discusses John Gardner’s theory that there are only two stories. Ironically, Bluefish can be categorized as both types. From Travis’s perspective, the story is about someone (him) going on a journey, but from Velveeta’s perspective, the story is about a stranger (Travis) who comes to town.
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