A Dynamic Character in John Updike's "A&P"

Essay by medic3434University, Bachelor'sA-, November 2003

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Sammy: A Dynamic Character in John Updike's "A&P"

In John Updike's "A&P", the main character, Sammy, becomes the story's narrator. Sammy is a typical nineteen-year-old man, working a boring, dead end job as a grocery store cashier in a lower middle class town. His only role models are Stokesie, a twenty-two year-old man doing the same job as Sammy, trying to support a family, and Lengel, his manager, who most likely some years earlier held the same occupation.

The entrance of the beautiful Queenie and her two friends break the cycle of the stereotypical customers that Sammy sees daily: "these are usually women with six children and varicose veins mapping their legs and nobody, including them, could care less" (p.16) . This is an eye opener for Sammy, who doesn't really step outside the boundaries of his boring little community.

Sammy not only notices Queenie as having remarkable beauty but also a slight arrogance about her: "she was showing them {the other two girls} how to do it, walk slow and hold yourself straight" (p.

15). Sammy can tell that Queenie is from at least an upper middle class family from the way she speaks and the manner she carries herself in. Sammy says that he "slid right down her voice into her living room" (p. 17). Being so envious and in awe of Queenie, he felt as if he had to do something to earn a place among those people in her social class, proving to himself and others he is better than the run-of-the-mill customers at the A&P. He quit his job not to impress Queenie, but to become one of the social elite.

While Sammy greatly admires Queenie's beauty and elegant manner, the ultra-conservative customers at the A&P think quite differently, almost negatively: "when Queenie's...