The Mosquito Coast depicts the story of an
unstable, antisocial individual whose
unsubstantiable
paranoia causes him to dramatically alter the courses of his and other
peoples
lives. The mans continual fear of a
nuclear invasion by an irate, immoral country
eventually this
man to move himself and his family to a remote jungle area of Honduras
where he planned
to establish a utopian society of his own design. Some themes that are
conveyed through
this story are the ability of split-second decisions to dramatically alter
anybody's life,
and the inability of certain individuals to be able to mentally handle the
stressful life of
western civilization.
Allie Foxx highly opposed the style of life
which had developed in the United
States. He believed religions to be useless, and our
government to be corrupted,
continually
drawing the unwanted attention of other countries tactile missiles. He saw
t.v. and
mainstream life as a form of mental poison.
He strictly raised his children to
incorporate the
same mental attitude which he held. He
saw himself as the last real man
alive. The combination of all these delusions
eventually prompted him to relocate
himself and his
family to a different country altogether, where he whatever lifestyle he so
desired.
Charley is the thirteen year old son of
Allie. He is naive to the practices of
modern society
because of his fathers continual and insisted sheltering from the evils of
everyday
life. He is very impressionable and sees
his father as the most brilliant man on
earth.
Jerry is the ten year old younger brother of
Charley. He enjoys bettering his
brother, and
cutting him down. He puts on a guise of
valiant bravery, yet inside he is
merely a
frightened child. Although he immensely
respects his brother he is unable to
relate these
emotions for he views them as feminine.
The story begins on a farm in Massachusetts,
but quickly shifts to the primitive,
remote jungles of
Honduras. It all takes place during the
early nineteen-eighties. The
setting
corresponds well with the time period and the main character. This period
showed many leaps
in technological advancement, which Allie refused to be a part of.
He instead chose
to live a simple, sheltered life. And
the remotes of Honduras was
essential in
attaining this type of lifestyle.
The dialogue of the natives in the story
combined with the effects of the harsh
jungle
environment make the author sound as if he knows much of the style of life
which
is typical to the
poverty stricken natives of South America.
He also seemed fascinated by
the effects that
unforgiving nature can have on a group of people.
This story does an effective job of immediately
fascinating you with the unusual
attitude of Allie
Foxx, and from that point it never lets your attention waver. It also is
effective at
stimulating emotions as you read. It
shows you unusual situations and
encourages you to
think of how you would handle such a situation.
The story also helps
you understand
why some people think the way they do, although it seems so unrealistic
and idiotic to
you or I.
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