Blog Post on The Perks of Being a Wallflower
The Narrator in the novel, “The Perks of Being a Wallflower”,
being Charlie Kelmeckis, was very reliable when talking about what he is doing
for himself, and what he has planned, but can sometimes be a little confusing
when he explains his past. I have already finished the book so what I can say
about how reliable Charlie is. I’ll say that when it comes to him and his Aunt
Helen, he tends to be completely oblivious to what Aunt Helen did to him,
during the beginning and the middle of the novel, he usually only explains the
good times they have had, spoiler alert, towards the end of the novel, Charlie
explains to the doctor that Aunt Helen molested him when he was a child.
“My Aunt Helen would always let us kids stay up and watch Saturday
Night Live when she was baby-sitting or when she was living with us and my
parents went to another couple’s house to get drunk and play board games”
(p.16) I found that Charlie the narrator was reliable when talking about the
good memories he had with Aunt Helen, it gave the readers and I an assumption
that Aunt Helen was the most loveable person, and when she passed, it deeply traumatized
Charlie when he kept telling himself all the good memories he had, and how it
was his fault for her death.
“Despite everything my mom and doctor and dad have said to
me about blame, I can't stop thinking what I know. And I know that my aunt
Helen would still be alive today if she just bought me one present like
everyone else. She would be alive if I was born on a day that didn't snow. I
would do anything to make this go away. I miss her terribly. I have to stop
writing now because I feel too sad.” (p.52). Basically, Charlie is saying that
he clearly goes to the doctor for therapy but doesn’t take any of the doctors
notes into consideration, leaving him into a depressed phase were he keeps blaming
himself but doesn’t really explain his Aunt Helen or what the doctors have told
him, making this quote of narrator, unreliable.
So this isn’t really a quote but more of a summary of what
happened in these few pages as a lot of stuff happened, p. (210-212) So
basically when Charlie’s crush, Sam, touched his lap, he got a flashback of his
past where Aunt Helen was molesting him, Charlie continued to deny that he was
the way he was because of what he remembered Aunt Helen doing, but when he
explained what he remembered to the doctors, the doctors then told his parents
that he was indeed molested as a child by his aunt. I know this isn’t a quote,
but I found that these past 2 pages of Charlie narrating his past started to
become clearer to him and to the readers, but his denial still made him an unreliable
narrator where the readers and I still needed some more hints to his past to
judge what happened.
I personally feel that Charlie was an unreliable narrator
but strictly for the fact that he was traumatized about his past making it hard
for the readers to follow along with him about it. However, I feel that Charlie
being a traumatized narrator was the reason why the book became so successful, strictly
because the readers had to continue reading to pin point hints to find out what
traumatized him so deeply.
Hello. Gabriel. I'm one of your classmates JungHyun.
ReplyDeleteI chose the same book but i haven't finished the novel yet.
However, I really enjoyed your blog post and I agreed with you that narrator is unreliable. We have different reasons because i haven't finished the novel and you finished it already. Unfortunately, i found out the important story from your post but it motivated me to finish the novel as soon as possible.
Oh dear, I am sorry JungHyun found out more about the story before she had read it. I think your observations about the character's reliability is sound, and this is always a good thing to consider when reading a text that comes from a single perspective.
ReplyDeleteGreat use of detail while explaining your thoughts on Charlies struggles.
ReplyDelete