Monday, October 12, 2009

Blog #2 - David Sedaris

‘The Understudy”, David and his sister, Gretchen are left at home while their parents are on vacation. Mrs. Byrd was their first babysitter, and they both really appreciated her and she would always like their hospitality. As well, there was Mrs. Robbins who was black and whenever either of the two sitters would come over. David would give a tour of the house and would always look forward to their reactions to the house. However, it came to a day where the parents changed to a different sitter, that the kids did not like, her name was Mrs. Peacock. This was bound to happen, the first problem was that the tour that David normally gave, did not get an overwhelming reaction like the other sitters in the past. Gretchen also had the belief that she was not a woman. Mrs. Peacock would not do too much around the house. She would always lie down and make the kids get her food and drinks. The only food that Mrs. Peacock she would cook was “sloppy joes”, probably one of the most simple things to cook. She only did laundry the night before the parents came back. However, it was funny at the end, David and his sister explained all these horrible things about Mrs. Peacock. Their mother did not believe a word and the chapter ended with their mother saying to Mrs. Peacock, “Honest to God, I don’t know how you put up with them for the entire week.”

“ ‘All right,’ our mother said. ‘Jesus, calm down.’ ‘She made us scratch her back until our arms almost fell off.’ ‘She cooked sloppy joe every night, and when we ran out of buns she told us to eat it on crackers.’ ”I really enjoy this passage as it just seems like something a kid would say in their nightmares, it also a perfect example of Sedaris' humorous writing.

David Sedaris uses allegories by relating to Mrs. Peacock to characters like Dracula and Frankenstein. Personifying her as a villain or evil person. The voice is the narrator of this story well there were two voices. One was of Gretchen his sister and the other of David, both of when they were younger and had strong opinions of Mrs. Peacock. Also, hyperboles are used when David was describing the weather outside, when Gretchen had to pull weeds outside, “She had to pull weeds in the blistering sun.”

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