Onions:
Sam’s onions are a symbol of everything good. Significantly,
they grow where the “water runs uphill.” Whenever the narrative flashes back to
a tale about the onions there is healing and good will. In addition to being a
positive force in the past, the onions become key to Stanley and Zero’s survival
in the present. They provide sustenance, cure Zero’s food poisoning, and keep
Stanley and Zero alive among the yellow-spotted lizards until the lawyer and the
Attorney General arrive to free them.
Holes:
The
holes symbolize the negative aspects of Camp Green Lake. They are referred to
as graves several times in the novel. In the holes lurk rattlesnakes, scorpions
and deadly yellow-spotted lizards. The boys who dig them resent the holes as the
emblem of their punishment, and spit in them. Stanley finds that the holes lead
right up to the Warden’s cabin. A hole is Stanley’s undoing when he tries to take
the water truck to rescue Zero. Metaphorically, all the holes must be filled in
for the story to resolve itself into a happy ending.
Landscape:
A motif, or idea that recurs throughout Holes, is how the landscape
affects the characters at Camp Green Lake. The longer the characters are out on
the lakebed, the more prone to violence they become. After prolonged digging in
the unrelenting heat, the Warden jabs Armpit with a pitchfork and Zigzag strikes
Stanley with a shovel (see Ch. 17). The tough, harsh surroundings become a metaphor
for the personality traits of the characters. Conversely, when Stanley is away
from the desert, in the cool, green shadow of “God’s thumb,” he is relaxed and
happy. The relative abundance on the mountain nurtures the generosity of spirit
that Stanley and Zero share.
Title/Author:
Holes by
Louis Sachar
Setting:
Camp Green Lake juvenile detention
center in Texas in the late 1990s; with flashbacks to Green Lake one hundred years
ago and to Latvia in the mid-1800s
Major Characters:
Stanley
Yelnats and Hector “Zero” Zeroni, two inmates at Camp Green Lake
Conflict:
Stanley struggles to survive and eventually prevail over the severe
people and conditions at Camp Green Lake, and in the process breaks the family
curse.
Themes:
The impact of fate and history on everyday
life; the power of friendship; compassion for victims of social injustice
Mood:
Hardship and Confusion
Point of View:
Omniscient narrator
Symbolism:
The impact of fate and history on everyday
life; the power of friendship; compassion for victims of social injustice
Motif:
The landscape acts as
a metaphor for the personality traits of the characters.
Names:
The desired perception of the characters is achieved by having dual names.
Cassie, Donna. "TheBestNotes on Holes".
TheBestNotes.com.
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