Thursday, September 10, 2009

Characterization of Hank the Cowdog

In Hank the Cowdog by John R. Erickson, the primary protagonist is Hank, a dog who feels he is in charge of the security on a small, west Texas ranch. Mr. Erickson does a fine job in getting us to know Hank, and find him often funny in many situations.

On page 112 John shows Hank to be actually a loyal friend to his sidekick, Drover. Though Hank often speaks poorly of his little friend, when John has Hank say, "You're outnumbered, they'll kill you, run for your life!" he shows us Hank cares more for Drover than he does about himself looking good in front of the coyotes. This shows us what Hank really cares about as a character.

On page 122 author Erickson shows Hank to be still too proud to be wrong about something. Hank tells Drover, "...I figured the only way we could crack the case was for me to infiltrate the coyote tribe." This clearly shows Hank's temperment to be one of pride about himself to the extent he will stretch the truth a long ways to make him look good.

On page 127 Mr. Erickson has Hank asking, "Was it my fault that she happened to be washing clothes that day?" This shows what Hank cares about most, and that is avoiding blame for wrongdoing. He clearly was running away from the skunk's smell, and he clearly ran into the house and got the clean laundry dirty. He is in charge of his actions, but when things go wrong he cares more about not getting blamed than accepting responsibility.

Hank is a funny lovable character, brought to life by John Erickson using much detail and vivid description. We get to know him well, like he was actually in our lives. In some ways, I wish he was.

1 comment:

Valentina said...

Hi Mr. Hughes,
You know the Mile file in the Pics folder, my name is in it but its not me; its Gillian! Its the last picture in it.