Thursday, November 14, 2019
Changing Feelings Towards Peter and Andrea in Once in a House on Fire E
Changing Feelings Towards Peter and Andrea in Once in a House on Fire    'Once in a house on fire' by Andrea Ashworth    At the beginning of the Novel, A freak accident robbed Andrea of a  loving father at the age of five. Her mother Lorraine, widowed at just  twenty-five years old, was distraught, not least because she was left  alone to raise Andrea and her younger sister Lauren ( also known as  Laurie). By the time Andrea was six, she had a new 'father'...    When the reader first meets Peter, it is difficult to contrive a clear  opinion of him. He seems to show that he wants to be the children's  "new daddy" by "lugging home bulging sacks of misshapen Mojos for my  sister and I" He also appears to have a good relationship with his  wife but we soon realise this is not so. A Jekyll and Hyde character,  he swings between loving husband and father and violent, terrifying  bully. Andrea would watch as her "mother smiled through his kissing  compliments" but these soon turned into "vicious shouting matches  which half the street could hear." The reader immediately feels anger  towards Peter for his unjustifiable behaviour towards his family. But  if you look at the quote, it is clear that it is a "match" which  generally consists of two people or groups competing for supremacy.  This shows that although Peter started the shouting, Andreas mother  also played a part. This makes the reader feel annoyed. This is  because although we feel that she should defend herself, she is  contributing to the argument and therefore making it worse.    Another incident showing how Lorraine contributed to an argument is  when Peter comes home she has "got the kids cooking behind his back."  and he is angry because he feels "she is lazing on her arse...              ...What Peter has done is completely unexpected and brings out  the Jekyll and Hyde element of his character. But for once, what he  has done is neither loving nor hating. This reaction completely  perplexes the reader.    What this shows is that even though Peter is everything the reader  thought in the first place, he is not as predictable and does not fit  the stereotype. However this does not make the reader begin to like  him but pity him even more. What is eventually clear is that although  we do not think he intended it, Peter subconsciously started to, if  not completely break the cycle he himself started. This is where the  feelings of the reader can be divided. On one hand It could said this  was just chance and it was Andrea who eventually broke the cycle or,  it could also be said that they both played equal parts and eventually  even Peter had, had enough.                        
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