Zusammenfassung der Ressource
English Literature:
Heroes
- Themes
- War
- Love
- Forgivness
- Loss of Innocence
- Concealment /
Revealment
- Heroism
- There are different examples of people being made heroes in the book
- Before they even go to war, Larry LaSalle is a hero to the kids of the Wreck Centre, he brings out the
best in them and they adore him, even at the end he is still making Francis feel better about himself,
and prevents him from becoming a murderer
- Is this more or less heroic than his war record?
- Francis is something of a peacetime hero as well - by becoming table tennis champio and
beating Larry LaSalle he becomes an icon to other children
- The scrapbook kept by the 'Strangler' at the St. Jude's club
contains newspaper clippings about the 'heroes' of
Frenchtown, including both LaSalle and Francis, the other men
regard it as something of a symbol, something to be proud of,
but Francis is ambivalent.
- Silver Star
- The Silver Star is the only medal awarded for 'heroism', we are told
- Both LaSalle and Francis have been awarded this medal, for saving lives of their fellow soliers, LaSalle does
does so by taking out a machine gun nest, Francis by falling on a grenade - the grenade that destroys his
face
- It is significant that one wins it by commiting an act of violence, whereas the other wins by taking the damage himself?
- It impresses the townsfolf - but Francis wants to remain anonymous
- "We weren't heroes, we were only there"
- Francis finds Arthur drunk outside the back of the St Jude club one night, Arthur is crying because he is
haunted by the war but nobody will talk about it, he scoffs at the idea of 'heroes' and says they were all just
scared boys, and that there was no glamour involved, hesays 'We weren't heores. We were only there."
- The Writer
- Robert Cormier
- 1925 - 2000
- He was born and brought up in Leominster in Massachusetts, in the
French-Canadian section of the town called French Hill, it is this place whcih is
loosely fictionalised in Heroes as Frenchtown
- He was an American noveslist, best known for his
many young adult novels, the most famous one being
The Chocolate War
- He was in his last years at high school when the USA
joined the war - making him roughly the same age as
Francis Cassavant in the novel, Cormeir had poor
eyesight though, which meant he could not join the
army, he studied and worked instead
- Characters
- Marie LaCroix
- Marie lives in the same apartments as Francis and provides a link between Francis and Nicole
- Marie acts as a confidante for Francis as he reveals to her he likes Nicole
- Towards the end of the novel readers learn that Marie has continued to provide a link
between the two as she has informed Nicole about Francis' Silver Star for bravery
- Sister Mathilde & Sister Gertrude
- Sister Mathilde is a figure from Francis' past who had an influence on him when he was at school
- Francis visits her to ask for information about Nicole
- Chapter 15
- She tells Francis that everyone has their secrets
- Sister Gertrude was one of Francis' teachers
- As he prays in St. Judes Church, it is Sister Gertrude's words which come into his head
- Chapter 1
- "Pray for your enemies, for those who have done you harm. It is easy to pray for those you love, she
said. But it counts more to pray for those who don’t love you, that you don’t love."
- Uncle Louis
- Looks after Francis after his parents die
- It is possible that Francis inherited his quiet personality from
Uncle Louis
- Page 33
- "a silent giant of a man"
- Although he provided a home for Francis,
and cared for him, he seldom spoke to him
from asking him about his day at school
- Mr Laureir
- Owner of the local drugstore and is a part of Francis' past
- Francis enjoyed working in
- Members of the Platoon
- Norman Rocheleau,
Eddie Richards,
Erwin Eisenberg,
Blinky Chambers,
Jack Smith, Sonny
Orlandi, Reilly, Billy
O'Brian and Henry
Johnson
- All of these were wartime
comrade of Francis and (with
the exception of Norman
Rocheleau) were all members
of his platoon
- They are
mentioned in
Francis' nightmare
and all either die
or received
injuries in the war
- Chapter 3
- When Francis
considers what it
means to be a hero
and these are the
men he thinks about
- Chapter 17
- Francis
- Disfigurement
- Physical
- Face
- Francis is very open about his injuries
- Chapter 1
- "The war is over and I have no face."
- His injuries were caused by the act which awarded him the Silver Star for Bravery
- He threw himself onto a grenade which saved members if his platoon
- At first his injuries isolate him from other people, but later of he
uses it to hide is identity from people
- Chapter 1
- "Anyway, this gives you an idea of what I look like
when I walk down the street. People glance at me in
suprise and look away quickly or cross the street
when they see me coming. I don't blame them."
- Phycological
- Isolation
- The loss of his family shows how Francis is rootless without the closeness of his
family that he obvisouly needs
- He idolises Larry as a role model and that he wants to be close to Nicole and share his
life with her
- He doesn't want to lose anyone else which is close to him
- Guilt
- Survivor Guilt
- Is a mental condition that occurs when a person thinks they
have done wrong by surviving a traumatic event when others
did not
- We know that Francis actually wanted to die in the war, when
he dived on top of the grenade
- This is made worse by the fact that everyone thinks he is a hero for doing it,
because they do not know why he dived on top of the grenade. He actually did it
to punish himself for letting Larry LaSalle rape Nicole
- "I looked for chances to die and instead killed others, and two of them kids like me...
When I fell on my grenade I wan't trying to save those GIs. I saw my chance to end it
all in a second."
- Relationships
- Nicole
- Love
- He is insecure and unable to speak to her, he
then tells Marie LaCroix that he likes her -
telling Marie not to say another to Nicole
while hoping that Marie will say something to
her
- Chapter 1
- "I knelt there like a knight at her feet, her sword
having touched my shoulder. I silently pledged my
love and loyalty forever."
- Worship
- francis idolises Nicole from the first moment he sees her, he wants
to dedicate himself to her and protect her
- Chapter 1
- "The pale purity of her face reminded me of the statue of St. Therese"
- Nicole is more mature than Francis and seems to
know that he likes her, so that in a way she
teases him
- Chapter 4
- ""Hello Francis." That same strange teasing in her voice
that I'd heard when she'd warned me about falling off the
banister."
- Francis seem jealous of the physical intimacy
between Larry LaSalle and Nicole while they
are dancing
- Chapter 5
- "Jealousy streaked through me as Larry LaSalle tossed
her in the air."
- When he wins the table tennis, Nicole casts
in the role of him being his 'Champion'
- Chapter 5
- "she was suddenly in front of me, radiant, clasping my hand, whispering
"My champion"."
- Francis still doesn't ask her out, and so Nicole starts
coming to Laurier's drugstore where he works, after she
tells him that she likes movies as well as book he finally
asks her out
- Her reply "that would be nice" is perfect because
their relationship is nice - sweet and tender and
to a large extent innocent
- Chapter 6
- ""The earth paused in its orbit.
- "That would be nice," she said at last."
- Francis blames himself for what happen to
Nicole when he left her with Larry
- "I stood there thinking of what I had seen in Nicole's
eyes. It's amazing that the heart makes no noise when
cracking."
- Her reaction when she sees him afterwards drives him to
consider suicide, and when he decides against this, he changes
his date of birth on his birth certificate to join the army
- "Finally I asked "What can I do?"
- "Poor Francis" she said at last. But no pity in her voice."
- Family
- Uncle
- Lives with his uncle after
his Dad dies
- Orphaned
- Mother
- Died giving birth to his brother, Rymond
- Francis was 6 at the time
- Father
- Died when Francis was a
teenager
- Rymond
- His brother who died at birth
- Armand Telliere, Joe LaFontaine, George Richelieu, The Strangler
- These are the men that are regulars at the St. Jude Club where the war veterans meet
- The Strangler is the bartender who keeps a scrapbook of Frenchtown heroes in which both Francis and Larry LaSalle figure
- Larry LaSalle
- Plot
- Background
- Pearl Habour
- The attack on Peal Harbor was a suprise millitary strike cinducted by the imperial Japanse Navy against the United
Statesnaval base at Pearl Habour, Hawaii, on the morning of December 7, 1941. The attack led to the United States
entry into World War II
- Inspiration for Book
- Heroes was published in 1998, Robert Cormier said that he was inspired to write the book by the 50th
anniversary celebrations of the D-Day landing of World War II, and the desire to recognise the heroic
acts of ordinary people
- Dancing in the Dark
- Fred Astaire
- Larry LaSalle is compared to Fred Astaire
- He was an American film and Broadway stage dancer, choreographer, singer, musician and actor, his
stage and subsquent film and television carees spanned a total 76 years, during which he made 31
musical films, several award winning television specials, and issued numerous recordings.
- He was named the fifth Greatest Male Star of All Time by the American Film insitite