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  1. The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton, published in 1967, is a coming-of-age novel set in the 1960s in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Hinton began writing The Outsiders at the age of fifteen, inspired by her frustration with the social divisions in her high school and the lack of realistic fiction for high school readers. The story is narrated by Ponyboy Curtis, a ...

    • Chapters 1 & 2

      Summary: Chapter 1. Ponyboy Curtis, the narrator, begins the...

    • Sodapop Curtis

      Sodapop Curtis - The Outsiders: Study Guide - SparkNotes

    • Full Book Summary

      The Outsiders. Full Book Summary. Ponyboy Curtis belongs to...

    • Key Facts

      Full title The Outsiders. Author S. E. Hinton. Type of work...

    • Context

      Context - The Outsiders: Study Guide - SparkNotes

    • Darry Curtis

      Darry is the oldest of the Curtis brothers, becoming the...

    • Cherry Valance

      Cherry Valance - The Outsiders: Study Guide - SparkNotes

    • Motifs

      Literature. Literary references occur throughout The...

  2. S. E. Hinton grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the city in which The Outsiders is set. Writing helped her to process her experiences and find refuge from her troubled home life. During Hinton's teenage years, she wrote two books that were unpublished before she wrote The Outsiders, which was published when she was 19 years old.

  3. The Outsiders. Full Book Summary. Ponyboy Curtis belongs to a lower-class group of Oklahoma youths who call themselves greasers because of their greasy long hair. Walking home from a movie, Ponyboy is attacked by a group of Socs, the greasers’ rivals, who are upper-class youths from the West Side of town.

    • Chapter 1
    • Chapter 2
    • Chapter 3
    • Chapter 4
    • Chapter 5
    • Chapter 6
    • Chapter 7
    • Chapter 8
    • Chapter 9
    • Chapter 10

    Ponyboy Curtis walks home alone one night when he is jumped by the Socs, a rival gang from the West Side. Ponyboy’s brothers Darry and Sodapop, along with other members of the greasers, intervene and scold Ponyboy for walking home alone. After making plans for the following night, Ponyboy returns home, reads Great Expectations, and listens to Sodap...

    The following night, Ponyboy, Johnny, and Dally go to the drive-in movie theater, where they sit behind a pair of Soc girls. Dally offers Cherry Valance a soda, only to have it thrown in his face, and he leaves to slash Tim Shepard’s tires, hoping to get into a fight. Cherry tells Ponyboy that not all Socs are violent like the ones that once beat J...

    On their way to Two-Bit’s house, Ponyboy and Cherry discuss the similarities and differences between the greasers and Socs, leading Ponyboy to believe that they might not be so different after all. When Cherry and Marcia’s boyfriends pull up in their Mustang, Ponyboy recognizes that the boy Bob was responsible for beating up Johnny, but before they...

    Ponyboy and Johnny walk through the park when they encounter a the Socs, including Randy and Bob, and get into an altercation. After being drowned and losing consciousness, Ponyboy wakes up to find Bob’s dead body and Johnny proclaiming that he killed him. Ponyboy and Johnny go to Dally who helps them and instructs them to take the train to an aban...

    While Ponyboy and Johnny hide, Ponyboy reads Gone with the Windto Johnny, and the two discuss the gentlemen in the story and how they remind them of the greasers. Dally shows up at the church with a letter from Sodapop and tells them that tensions between the greasers and the Socs have reached an all-time high. Dally also reveals that Cherry Valanc...

    Dally begins to drive Ponyboy and Johnny home when they notice that the church is on fire and children from a nearby school are trapped inside. Johnny and Ponyboy rush in to save the children, but just as the roof is about to cave in, Johnny pushes Ponyboy out of the way and incurs serious injuries. Ponyboy is taken to the hospital accompanied by J...

    The papers report about Ponyboy, Dally, and Johnny’s heroics, as well as Johnny being tried for manslaughter and the possibility of Ponyboy being sent to a boy’s home. Sodapop goes on to tell Ponyboy that Sandy got pregnant and has moved to Florida to live with her grandmother, as her parents refused to let her marry Sodapop. At the Tasty Freeze, R...

    Ponyboy and Two-Bit visit Johnny and Dally in the hospital. On their way home, Cherry tells the boys that the Socs will not use weapons during the rumble. Ponyboy reminds Cherry that he can see the sunset on the East Side like she can see it on the West Side. Read a full Summary & Analysis of Chapters 7 & 8

    A long struggle ensues between the Socs and the greasers before the greasers are ultimately victorious. After the fight, Dally and Ponyboy visit Johnny at the hospital where he eventually dies. Ponyboy is struck with grief and runs out the room.

    Beset by Johnny’s death, Dally robs a grocery store and is eventually shot and killed by the police. Ponyboy passes out after suffering a head wound during the fight. When Ponyboy wakes up he learns he has been in bed for three days. Read a full Summary & Analysis of Chapters 9 & 10

  4. Book Summary. The Outsiders is about two weeks in the life of a 14-year-old boy. The novel tells the story of Ponyboy Curtis and his struggles with right and wrong in a society in which he believes that he is an outsider. Ponyboy and his two brothers — Darrel (Darry), who is 20, and Sodapop, who is 16 — have recently lost their parents in ...

  5. The Outsiders Summary. Ponyboy Curtis, the fourteen-year-old narrator, lives with his older brothers Sodapop and Darry, since their parents passed away in a car accident. They are all members of a Greaser gang, meaning they are considered hoods or juvenile delinquents by society. Other than being financially and socially disadvantaged, the ...

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  7. The Outsiders (1967) is S. E. Hinton’s first novel, which she wrote when she was a high school student. The novel addresses themes of violence, masculinity, and belonging, all of which Hinton witnessed first-hand with her childhood friends. In interviews, Hinton has explained that she saw a need for realistic books for teenage readers and ...

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