The story that I have chosen to write about for my second reading journal is called 'The prospector's trail'. It takes place in the modern day, just outside Yellowknife, North-West Territories. The main character is called Norman, a man who has dreams of becoming a nature interpreter at a wildlife preserve or wildlife center. He has a controlling wife who he has recently married, on a whim, after they met in college. They had graduated from a small college in Winnipeg about a year before and "Norman still couldn't believe it... he'd been flattered when she consented to date him because she liked his sense of whimsy". Due to a series of unfortunate mishaps, Norman could no longer get a job in Winnipeg and his wife, Jennifer, could not support the two of them. So they decided to try and open an interpretive center, with Norman managing it, not doing the interpreting like he wanted to. They meet an old man named Roy, who is a prospector and Norman thinks he may be a good person to work at the interpretive center.
The next day Jennifer goes into town to find a job, but is too embarrassed to take Norman along, further implicating her as someone Norman shouldn't have associated himself with. Norman is crushed and looks to Roy for some help. Roy finally agrees to take Norman prospecting with him but, to Norman's surprise, what he really does is search the city dump for objects and restores them to good condition before selling them. Norman is wary at first but finally comes around and ends up hopeful. Jennifer had warned that Norman had 6 weeks to get some money and get the interpretive center going and that if she caught him trying to "out-northern the northerners" (wearing a red plaid flannel shirt represented this to her) she would leave him on the spot.
In the end, Norman decides that Jennifer is not right for him and that he is better off without her, conveniently, she disappears with her possessions and their van after she catches him wearing the forbidden shirt. I know how Norman feels about this, I've met many people who try to become your friend to see what they can get you to do, or do for them. They just like to use you, for one purpose or another (in Jennifer's case, she probably thought originally that he had potential in his work), and you're better off without them. Coincidentally, the night after Jennifer leaves, Norman's insomnia (which has plagued him for months) disappears.
In my opinion, the morals of this story were two things. First: Sometimes you need to make the best of a bad situation. Norman was on his last $100, he had nowhere left to go and he still became happy. Second: Some people you are better off without. Jennifer obviously did not love Norman and wanted a better life for herself. She is a self-centered character who is not concerned with others (including her 'alleged' loved ones). These are the two messages that the author was trying to convey in this short story, and I think she did it effectively.
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1 comment:
A detailed summary, probably a bit longer than it needed to be. You raise an interesting point. Woman are often accused of thinking that they can change a man after they have married them. Do you think that this might have been what Jennifer hoped to do? You have touched on author's craft. I'm not sure that this story contains morals. There might be a theme in there somewhere about the fact that we are happier when we are true to ourselves and following our own dreams.
Mark: eight out of ten.
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