Kathy Nicolo And Sheriff Lester Burdon example essay topic
Then there is the Behrani, a Persian family who was forced to flee to America in fear of their lives. They want the house because it symbolizes their rise from poverty (they had to leave everything behind and were quite poor when they arrived in the United States) back to affluence which, to this family, will help to restore their family's dignity, lost when thrust into poverty. The story centers on gaining possession of the house. Unknowingly, all of these characters are doomed to tragedy by their inability to understand each other, hurtling down an explosive collision course. The main characters in this story are Sheriff Lester Burdon, Kathy Nicolo, Massoud Amir Behrani, Mrs. Behrani, and their son, Esmail Behrani.
Lester has a very soft spot in his heart for battered and abandoned women, an outlook that Burdon attributes to his father's having left his mother when Lester and his brother were teenagers. Kathy is a house cleaner who had inherited the house from her father, but lost it because she couldn't afford the mortgage. She is a genuinely kind person, but is very arrogant and bull-headed sometimes. Mr. Behrani is a former colonel in the Imperial Air Force of Iran. Behrani served Shahanshah Reza Pahlavi faithfully and effectively until the Shah's overthrow in 1979, which also destroyed the privilege, power, wealth, and position of people like Colonel Behrani.
He is very wise but has a quick temper that he usually controls. Mrs. Behrani is a kind woman but not very smart and cannot speak English very well. Esmail is a very kindhearted person who wants to help Kathy even though it conflicts with his family being able to keep the house. This book combines characteristics of a suspense thriller with those of a tragedy and is a very interesting book to read. I liked the detail that the author went into about the psychological aspects of the characters in making the decisions that they made.
I thought that the characters were well developed and I liked the detail that the author went into about the settings. A detailed setting can really increase the intensity and realism of a situation in a book. This book contained some difficult words that lower level readers might not understand. I would recommend that anyone looking for a suspense / tragedy oriented book should look to this one. The beginning is a somewhat tedious read, but that is only because the author takes so much time to develop the characters and settings. But it is exactly that detailed development in the beginning that makes the climax so much more enjoyable.
The author, Andre Dubus, has also written Bluesman and The Cage Keeper. He has been awarded the Pushcart Prize and the 1985 National Magazine Award for Fiction. This book was a finalist for the 1999 National Book Award for Fiction and I concur wholeheartedly with that placement. It is a well-written book with beautifully developed characters and the right amount of detail to draw the reader in.