65 pages • 2 hours read
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The Prologue takes place outside the timeline of the story. The narrator describes the hotness of early August and how such days lead people to act differently than they normally do. The narrator explains three unrelated events: Mae Tuck meeting her sons, Winnie Foster thinking about running away from home, and a strange man standing outside Winnie’s house. The narrator compares these events to a wheel with a central hub, adding that “things can come together in strange ways” and that people sometimes don’t realize these connections until it is too late (5).
Chapter 1 begins by describing a winding road that passes around a forbidding wood and the village of Treegap, where Winnie Foster lives with her family. Though the wood belongs to the Fosters, Winnie has never been there or even been curious about it. The only creatures of consequence who’ve gone near the wood are cows, who, with some otherworldly wisdom, passed around it instead of through it. They avoided the ash tree in the wood’s center and the partially concealed spring at the tree’s roots, which the narrator says is a very good thing. If people discovered the spring, it would have been a disaster so great that the Earth “would have trembled on its axis like a beetle on a pin” (10).
A day’s ride from Treegap, Mae Tuck wakes and decides to meet her sons, Jesse and Miles, who are visiting for the first time in 10 years. She wakes her husband Angus, who goes by Tuck. He grouches at her for disturbing his dream where their whole family is in heaven. Mae scolds him, saying she doesn’t know why he bothers with the dream since “nothing's going to change” (12).
Tuck goes back to sleep, and Mae gets ready to leave, putting her music box in her skirt pocket and doing her hair. Though she has a mirror, she doesn’t care to gaze upon her reflection. She knows what she’ll see because she, Tuck, and their sons have “looked exactly the same for eighty-seven years” (13).
Tuck Everlasting is narrated by an omniscient observer who is outside the story and knows everything about the characters, plotline, and resolution of the book. The final line of the Prologue calls attention to the difference between what the narrator and characters know. The narrator claims the Tucks, Winnie, and the strange man are seemingly unrelated, meaning to other observers, they would appear to have no correlation. The narrator foreshadows their relation by describing how events can come together without participants noticing until it is too late, which is the case in Tuck Everlasting.
The book relies heavily on the setting and scenery to forward the story. Chapter 1 opens with the description of the only road through Treegap, a place where much of the story takes place and where major events occur. The severe heat of early August symbolizes the strange decisions made by the characters throughout the book.
These chapters introduce the main players of the book—Winnie Foster, the Tucks, and the man in the yellow suit. Chapter 2 focuses on Mae and her husband, showing the simple life they live to keep the secret of their unchanging nature. It also introduces the different ways their situation affects the Tucks, as evidenced by Mae’s acceptance and Tuck’s sorrow.
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