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If the outsider didn't exist, the overseers wouldn't of existed at all. They would of been normal people. And maybe even the howlers didn't have to exist, since Paolo has granny rags hand which is marked by the outsider.
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Apr 24, 2017 · Many have claimed that “young adult” fiction didn’t exist before S.E. Hinton wrote her cult classic–but it did, sort of.
- Kat Eschner
Jun 7, 2022 · Warner Bros. Pictures. You may not realize it, but part of the reason "The Outsiders" feels so authentic is because the novel it's based on was, in turn, based on real-world events. S.E....
- Belief and Disbelief
- Reality and Change
- Fear
- Betrayal
- Freedom
- The Light of Good
- Bravery
Stephen King portrayed the lack of belief and how that affected serving justice in “The Outsider.”The quote above explains the rigidity of humanity towards accepting a concept they have no clue or control over. The Outsider used the lack of belief as his greatest weapon because he knew that people would never consider the possibility of a supernatu...
The quote above talks about a concept that has stayed relevant in society: change. Stephen King portrayed the change of ideologies in “The Outsider” by making a scenario where ideologies change with a single event. The element of change was The Outsider himself, an entity that could have never existed by mere logic. Ralph realized his encounter wit...
Even though Terry knew he was innocent, there was no way to convince anyone he was innocent at the moment of his arrest. The aura of disgust people felt towards him scared him because he knew it would affect his family. Even though Howie believed in his innocence and knew there would be people that did too, he realized that the number of people tha...
Betrayal makes one angry, and Terry was in a position to feel every string of betrayal and anger towards the man who had shattered his life by leading a public arrest on him for a crime he did not commit. Though Terry did not know Ralph also acted as a result of feeling betrayed by the man he trusted with his son, Terry felt revenge was his best al...
Freedom has been a basic need of every human, and in “The Outsider,”freedom became an insatiable desire. Ralph wanted freedom from being trapped, and he fantasized about that freedom. Trapped under a cave, the desire to see the light above ground became Ralph’s human instinct, and it showed just how valuable liberty is.
Facing an evil being that rapes and murders his victims is the stuff of nightmares. After fighting this creature, Holly tries consoling herself with the idea that because El Cuco existed, there was an opposite of him, a force of purity.
Amidst the fear of losing their father, Marcy held her daughters and told them to be brave for the future. She knew life would be tougher and wanted her children to prepare.
The Outsiders suffers from the Seinfeld problem; everybody else has built on the foundation that it laid, and now it seems tame by comparison. Modern YA has no problem dealing with difficult topics like death and police violence, but for its time The Outsiders was rather unique.
Mar 9, 2020 · The Outsider Ending Explained. HBO's The Outsider comes to an explosive finish that neatly ties up the story of El Coco and leaves some room for more supernatural mystery.
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Why did the outsider use a lack of belief as his greatest weapon?
In April 1967 the Viking Press brought out a book called The Outsiders, by S. E. Hinton and the world of young adult writing and publishing would never be the same. This is not an exaggeration....