- In his essay, Paterniti uses “close 3rd” point of view as he describes each of the main characters. What is close 3rd, and how does his choice of point of view impact your understanding and impression of motel owners Jack and Bout, specifically?
I think his choice makes us look at the whole picture all the time rather than one side half the time and also it’s more like we are interacting and talking with the characters in the story rather than just reading about their actions.
- The dreaded question–what is this essay really about, in your own words? Frame one direct quote (using the quote sandwich method) to support your answer.
I think that this essay is really about multiple points of view and how people feel about a similar situation. And how people don’t realize that other people are going through the same thing just handling it differently and maybe with empathy and more of an open mind. Rather than clinging to old ideas and ways that aren’t healthy or needed or wanted anymore.like when Bout says. “That right, she says, shaking her head, slapping the counter. We all boat people here, isn’t that right?” She said we all are in the same situation and our ancestral wise had to come to the US on a boat to find a better life than what was in our ancestral lands. It’s people like Jack and Bev who have forgotten what it was like for their ancestors to build a new life in the US.
- What do you think Paterniti wants us, the reader, to think about once we finish his essay? Use two direct quotes to support your answer.
I think Paterniti wants us to see two very different views in America who are both having different mindsets with their struggles. Like Jack thinks this…”Their beauty fills Jack Hooker with a flicker of sadness. No such thing as the American Dream anymore, he says. You used to do business on your honor and good name. You could spend half a life building your good name, and the IRS takes it away. You know the story about the ten Indians? Then there were nine, eight, seven….There’s no American Dream left.” hes hopeless, but hes kinda put himself in that on his own. Where Bout isn’t. “That’s what keeps you up at night. Almost helps to have a job like this, behind the desk at the Thunderbird Motel. People coming and going. Late, a white man from Ohio stops in with his son. Driving America on summer vacation—New Orleans, Big Bend, all over. Stopped in next door at the Astro, but prices are a little higher over there, will take a room here. Donna likes talking, talks to them. Pots rumble outside the window. When it comes out that Donna’s from Laos, the man tells the story of some Cambodians in his Ohio town. The Tran family. Don’t speak English, but they came to Thanksgiving dinner. Before eating, someone stood up and told the story of the Pilgrims: how they came on the Mayflower, nine weeks at sea, arrived starving and homeless and learned to grow corn and pumpkin from the Indians. The story was translated for Mr. Tran, and when he heard it, he smiled and exclaimed delightedly, Ah, you’re boat people, too! When Donna hears this, she breaks out giggling, flashes a big smile. Seems as if a great weight has been momentarily lifted from her shoulders. That right, she says, shaking her head, slapping the counter. We all boat people here, isn’t that right?” She hears this story from a customer and she relates to it and him that we all are american. He wants us to be aware of this and to know that there are other less progressive views like jacks out there but he also wants us to know why people like jack feel that way.
- What does it mean “to be American”? How do Jack and about support and/or challenge your definition of “American”?
It means to be American is to leave your “homeland” and start over. There’s different definitions of being an American from different americans. To be American is to change and be progressive. I think they both show the different stages and viewpoints of lots of Americans and how different Americans deal with stuff differently.
- How do the themes in “Eating Jack Hooker’s Cow” interact with themes in prior readings? Be specific.
It’s the opposite of the theme of all empathy and kindness at being needed that we have read about in other articles. He’s showing ugly hate at his world changing. And it’s also showing the other side that’s going through his hate. It’s a different scale of looking at empathy. In this quote. “So go with Jack Hooker now. At sunset. Out into the empty parking lot of the Astro Motel. Look to either side, at your neighbors. They’re holding your money in their yellow fingers. They own a Jeep Grand Cherokee and an Acura Legend and three other cars, and you have only your old Buick. Can you feel something building? Can you feel what a man like Jack Hooker feels? Maybe the difference between you and a real man like Jack Hooker is that he will tell you what he hates; he will honor his hate and unleash it and understand that his hate will come back on him, understand that he, too, is hated. For a real man like Jack Hooker realizes that he hates and is hated.” All he sees is hate and jealously. He is racist and mean. Even the title of this story shows the theme of “mine” and taking. “Eating Jack Hooker’s Cow”.