Accordion Crimes: Dismal Reality Checks

Below is one of our free research papers on Accordion Crimes: Dismal Reality Checks. If the term paper below is not exactly what you're looking for, you can search our essay database for other topics or order a custom essay.

Accordion Crimes: Dismal Reality Checks

Accordion Crimes: Dismal Reality Checks

Author: E. Annie Proulx


Accordion Crimes is a difficult book to place in a single time period
because the story takes place over about 100 years, originating in a small
Sicilian village, but the main setting and focus is the United States.
The various settings introduced in the book influenced the characters in
various ways, but one instance of influence was great enough to cause his death.
The accordion maker was literally ruled over by his setting. The setting around
him was one of oppression that worked against him because he was Sicilian. "…
The accordion maker saw the approaching men with searing clarity, the loose
thread on a coat, mud-spattered trouser legs, a logging chain in a big hand,
the red shine of the engorged faces, a man with one blue eye and one yellow eye.
Even then he hoped to be saved. He was innocent!
Pinse held his revolver loosely in his hand, had lost his staff in the
rush up the stairs, so crowded it had been, looked at the Sicilians knotted in
the corner, their wicked eyes glittering, some of them pleading and praying -
the cowards! He thought of the rat king, fired. Others fired.
A barrage of bullets and shot of every caliber and weight tore the
Sicilians. The accordion maker reared twice and fell back." A character that
has a great deal of intrigue is the accordion maker. The most interesting fact
of this character is that he has no name, only an occupation. This is symbolic
of all the millions of faceless immigrants that came to America in search of
their dreams, but very few found them waiting, much less at all. "...He had his
theory, his idea of the fine instrument; with the proof of this one, he planned
to make his fortune in La Merica." The accordion maker himself was a large man,
but more sensitive that most like him. He despised working through problems and
simply let his wife handle them when she could. Once in La Merica, the
accordion maker had to deal with squalid living...
  • Submitted by: gjyici5551
  • Date Submitted: 07/27/2000 09:15 PM
  • Category: History Other
  • Words: 1521
  • Pages: 7
  • Views: 172
  • Rank: 208441

Saved Papers

Save papers so you can find them more easily!

Join Now

Get instant access to over 180,000 papers.

Join Now