This section contains 1,331 words (approx. 4 pages at 400 words per page) |
Joe's Childhood Home, Minnesota, 1920s-1930s
Joe’s childhood symbolizes two things: the wealth and comfort of Joe’s family and Joe’s need for places apart, places where he can be alone and think. Joe’s earliest memories are of his family’s roomy home. Not only does the family employ a household staff, but the rooms themselves are carefully appointed and designed to serve as a social center for the Hacketts’ circle of upper middle-class families. The home reflects the family’s comfortable income from a home coal delivery service (a nearly year-round lucrative business in Minnesota). But they also represent the ill-gotten gain from the father’s shadier dealings with Prohibition-era bootlegging. For Joe, the home offers as well an attic where he goes when he needs to think after run-ins with schoolmates or when he feels an inexplicable anxiety over ideas he has about right...
This section contains 1,331 words (approx. 4 pages at 400 words per page) |