Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Why does the memory of the day with Ray Singh seem so important to Susie after her death? chapter 6

If you died
at 14 and were looking down from heaven, what of your life would you remember? Would you
remember the moment when you were about to experience your first kiss with someone? Why might
this type of memory stick in your mind?

The serial killer, Mr. Harvey, has
denied Susie a full life. Her life is cut off before she can experience all that teens
experience. And in a full life, one hopefully has a love, perhaps a true love, or at least a
momentary connection with someone. Susie is about fulfill a romantic and sexual moment with Ray
Singh -- a first kiss -- and then the moment is ripped away, just as her life is. You can
imagine that a girl from heaven looking back over her life, should she have any nostalgia, might
feel some for "the kiss that never happened." (Others who live to full adulthood might
remember a wedding ceremony, having children, etc...)

What is interesting
about the moment that stops the kiss from happening? It's the chastisement of Ruth that
interrupts Ray and Susie from kissing. Ruth is the girl whom Susie is spiritually connected to,
and she is being criticized by the principal and the art teacher, for drawing honest pictures of
real women, ones that might be a bit too "real" for middle and high schoolers to look
at. (In other words, what master artists often do: draw from real life, even the naked body. But
for these adults in the 1970s, this type of drawing by a teen is viewed as
inappropriate.)

Note what Ruth is doing, what Ray and Susie are about to do,
and what the serial killer does. All of these images and plot elements revolve around romance
and the body and sexuality. In the case of Susie and Ray, something pure and romantic is about
to occur. In the case of Ruth, something pure, borne out of curiosity, is about to be explored.
But in the case of Mr. Harvey...he is an evildoer who perverts and exploits "the lovely
bones." Ruth glorifies them. Ray and Susie glory in first love. The backdrop is the evil
that Mr. Harvey has done. Yet, does Susie rise above the darkness? Does she transcend it? Do you
think the book has a positive energy about it, about the power of humans to redeem the evil and
suffering they endure?

Balance this memory with other memories that Susie
holds dear. Where does it rank in the light of her other memories? If a person only has 14
years, what will a person take with them to the grave and beyond?

Good luck
with your analysis.

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