Lord of the Flies Reading Responce (so far)

    Lord of the Flies is a story about a group of kids stranded on a deserted island. The story tells about friends becoming enemies, kids ganging up, kids losing morals, and how characters change over time.
    Lord of the Flies is meant to serve a much more profound purpose than a book about kids on an island. This goal is to bring a new life the ideas of power, corruption, and change. The author does this by first telling the story through a non-bias third person narrator. Next, he introduces charactors that are ment to represent a quality of life; Piggy represents what the boys were before they landed on the island, Jack represents what the boys are becoming, and Ralph is the choice between the two. The Lord of the Flies tracks the decisions Ralph, the people, make, and who he is becoming. So far, Ralph was with Piggy, what he was before the island, but in chapter seven he begins to hunt like Jack, and he even gave away his morals by reliving his hunt and nearly killing another kid. The purpose of this story is to show the path that the kids are traveling down, from humans to savages. The author most likely did this to inform the reader about power and corruption through an easy to follow plot.
  

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