Pancho Sanchez is a 17-year-old
adolescent who has lost his mother and father, and very recently his sister.
After his sister's death he was sent off to a foster home and then got himself
kicked out of that foster home and into the St. Anthony's Orphanatory. Pancho
is kid, who’s mind is clouded by vengeance and hatred, he wants to kill the man
that murdered his sister. IN the foster home he meets a boy with brain cancer
called Daniel Quentin or just D.Q. Pancho is assigned to take care of D.Q.
because, although D.Q. can walk he doesn't have enough strength due to the
radiation of his treatments. As Pancho's eagerness to find Rosa's (his sister)
killer grows, D.Q. notices that he has to tell Pancho what his plans are. D.Q
reveals that he is dying and that before his death he wants to write a book
with the help of Pancho, called " The Death Warrior Manifesto" in
which there are rules/instructions on how to live life. Pancho says that that's
never going to happen and he leaves the room kind of mad/bad, leaving D.Q.
alone. A few hours gone past, Pancho decides that he is going to build a
punching bag and he gets the help of a boy who everybody calls Memo. After
they're done building it Memo calls two other kids to help them get the
punching bag up in the tree, one of the boys was called Coop, he was very
strong and a little taller than Pancho, so Pancho asked him if he wanted to
fight Pancho for 20 bucks. Pancho won the fight but he felt something in the
actions that he did was not right, so the next morning he called his guardian,
Mrs. Olivares, and asked if he could go and get some stuff from his trailer,
she said yes. D.Q. came along with, although Pancho didn't want it he came. at
his trailer he got Rosa's diary and his father’s revolver for when he finds
Rosa's killer.
“Rule number one: A Death Warrior
does not whine aloud or in silence under any circumstance.” (Stork, 38) I think
that what this quote means is that the Death Warriors should never complain
about anything aloud or complain about things but not saying them but thinking
them. I believe that D.Q. said this to Pancho because Pancho is always
complaining about something, if it’s not liking it ant St. Tony’s then it’s
about how the cops refused to look further in in the death of his sister. I
also think that he says this because maybe D.Q. used to complain about how
unfair life is for giving him brain cancer or maybe for his parents abandoning
him when he was just a youngling. Any ways, I chose this quote because it made
me think deeply about how both D.Q. and Pancho may be feeling, and about how we
complain about everything and not be thankful about what we have at the moment.
So far this book has proven to me
to be very interesting and a little bit sad. Sad because I can’t even begin to
imagine what Pancho must be going throw, first losing his mother, then his
father, and now his sister. Then there’s D.Q., honestly I have to say that I admire
him for his peacefulness knowing that his time on this Earth is about to run
out but I admire him the most for what he intends to live behind when he parts.
I think that the Death Warrior Manifesto will help Pancho in his life, that is
if he follows it.
Martin, I really like how you explain the quotes in order for readers to understand the novel and for them to get inside the book. I liked how you gave details about everything, but you should stop giving long summaries,focus more on the quotes.
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