Analysis of a Short Story - The Jackt

My clothes have failed me. I remember the green coat that I wore in fifth and sixth grades when you either danced like a champ or pressed yourself against a greasy wall, bitter as a penny toward the happy couples. 

When I needed a new jacket and my mother asked what kind I wanted, I described something like bikers wear: black leather and silver studs with enough belts to hold down a small town. We were in the kitchen, steam on the windows from her cooking. She listened so long while stirring dinner that I thought she understood for sure the kind I wanted. The next day when I got home from school, I discovered draped on my bedpost a jacket the color of day-old guacamole. I threw my books on the bed and approached the jacket slowly, as if it were a stranger whose hand I had to shake. I touched the vinyl sleeve, the collar, and peeked at the mustard-colored lining.

From the kitchen mother yelled that my jacket was in the closet. I closed the door to her voice and pulled at the rack of clothes in the closet, hoping the jacket on the bedpost wasn’t for me but my mean brother. No luck. I gave up. From my bed, I stared at the jacket. I wanted to cry because it was so ugly and so big that I knew I’d have to wear it a long time. I was a small kid, thin as a young tree, and it would be years before I’d have a new one. I stared at the jacket, like an enemy, thinking bad things before I took off my old jacket whose sleeves climbed halfway to my elbow. 

I put the big jacket on. 

I zipped it up and down several times, and rolled the cuffs up so they didn’t cover my hands. I put my hands in the pockets and flapped the jacket like a bird’s wings. I stood in front of the mirror, full face, then profile, and then looked over my shoulder as if someone had called me. I sat on the bed, stood against the bed, and combed my hair to see what I would look like doing something natural. I looked ugly. I threw it on my brother’s bed and looked at it for a long time before I slipped it on and went out to the backyard, smiling a “thank you” to my mom as I passed her in the kitchen. With my hands in my pockets I kicked a ball against the fence, and then climbed it to sit looking into the alley. I hurled orange peels at the mouth of an open garbage can and when the peels were gone I watched the white puffs of my breath thin to nothing.

I jumped down, hands in my pockets, and in the backyard on my knees I teased my dog, Brownie, by swooping my arms while making bird calls. He jumped at me and missed. 

He jumped again and again, until a tooth sunk deep, ripping an L-shaped tear on my left sleeve. I pushed Brownie away to study the tear as I would a cut on my arm. There was no blood, only a few pieces of fuzz. Dumb dog, I thought, and pushed him away hard when he tried to bite again. I got up from my knees and went to my bedroom to sit with my jacket on my lap, with the lights out. 

That was the first afternoon with my new jacket. The next day I wore it to sixth grade and got a D on a math quiz. During the morning recess Frankie T., the playground terrorist, pushed me to the ground and told me to stay there until recess was over. My best friend, Steve Negrete, ate an apple while looking at me, and the girls turned away to whisper on the monkey bars. The teachers were no help: they looked my way and talked about how foolish I looked in my new jacket. I saw their heads bob with laughter, their hands half-covering their mouths.

Even though it was cold, I took off the jacket during lunch and played kickball in a thin shirt, my arms feeling like Braille from goose bumps. But when I returned to class I slipped the jacket on and shivered until I was warm. I sat on my hands, heating them up, while my teeth chattered like a cup of crooked dice. Finally warm, I slid out of the jacket but a few minutes later put it back on when the fire bell rang. We paraded out into the yard where we, the sixth graders, walked past all the other grades to stand against the back fence. Everybody saw me. Although they didn’t say out loud, “Man, that’s ugly,” I heard the buzz-buzz of gossip and even laughter that I knew was meant for me. 

And so I went, in my guacamole-colored jacket. So embarrassed, so hurt, I couldn’t even do my homework. I received Cs on quizzes, and forgot the state capitals and the rivers of South America, our friendly neighbor. Even the girls who had been friendly blew away like loose flowers to follow the boys in neat jackets. 

I wore that thing for three years until the sleeves grew short and my forearms stuck out like necks of turtles. All during that time no love came to me—no little dark girl in a Sunday dress she wore on Monday. At lunchtime I stayed with the ugly boys who leaned against the chainlink fence and looked around with propellers of grass spinning in our mouths. We saw girls walk by alone, saw couples, hand in hand, their heads like bookends pressing air together. We saw them and spun our propellers so fast our faces were blurs. 

I blame that jacket for those bad years. I blame my mother for her bad taste and her cheap ways. It was a sad time for the heart. With a friend I spent my sixth-grade year in a tree in the alley, waiting for something good to happen to me in that jacket, which had become the ugly brother who tagged along wherever I went. And it was about that time that I began to grow. My chest puffed up with muscle and, strangely, a few more ribs. Even my hands, those fleshy hammers, showed bravely through the cuffs, the fingers already hardening for the coming fights. But that L-shaped rip on the left sleeve got bigger, bits of stuffing coughed out from its wound after a hard day of play. I finally Scotchtaped it closed, but in rain or cold weather the tape peeled off like a scab and more stuffing fell out until that sleeve shriveled into a palsied arm. That winter the elbows began to crack and whole chunks of green began to fall off. I showed the cracks to my mother, who always seemed to be at the stove with steamed-up glasses, and she said that there were children in Mexico who would love that jacket. I told her that this was America and yelled that Debbie, my sister, didn’t have a jacket like mine. I ran outside, ready to cry, and climbed the tree by the alley to think bad thoughts and watch my breath puff white and disappear.

But whole pieces still casually flew off my jacket when I played hard, read quietly, or took vicious spelling tests at school. When it became so spotted that my brother began to call me “camouflage,” I flung it over the fence into the alley. Later, however, I swiped the jacket off the ground and went inside to drape it across my lap and mope. 

I was called to dinner: steam silvered my mother’s glasses as she said grace; my brother and sister with their heads bowed made ugly faces at their glasses of powdered milk. I gagged too, but eagerly ate big rips of buttered tortilla that held scooped-up beans. Finished, I went outside with my jacket across my arm. It was a cold sky. The faces of clouds were piled up, hurting. I started up the alley and soon slipped into my jacket, that green ugly brother who breathed over my shoulder that day and ever since.

Group 1

How did the jacket get a tear in the sleeve? 

Question 1a

Short answer
When did this happen?

Question 2

Short answer
How does the author’s first description of the jacket let you know that he does not like it?

Group 3

Is the narrator’s family wealthy?

Question 3a

Short answer
How do you know?

Question 4

Short answer
How did the narrator respond to his mother about her choice in jacket?

Question 5

Short answer
How did the narrator feel about the jacket when he first saw it?

Question 6

Short answer
For how many years did the narrator have to wear the jacket?

Question 7

Short answer
According to the narrator, how did the girls he knew respond to his jacket?

Question 8

Short answer
By the end of the story, how do the narrator’s feelings change about the jacket?

Teach with AI superpowers

Why teachers love Class Companion

Import assignments to get started in no time.

Create your own rubric to customize the AI feedback to your liking.

Overrule the AI feedback if a student disputes.

Other English Assignments

10. Telling lies or hiding the truth is acceptable for the right reasons.10th Grade Unit 2 Essay11th Grade Dystopian Unit Final Assessment11. True love can conquer all problems.12. Love is a decision you make, not something that happens to you.13. You should always listen to the advice of people more experienced than you.14. Our choices determine our destinies.15. The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return.1963 The Year that Changed Everything1. Our lives are controlled by fate.2:26 Persuasion Quick Write2-28 Improve PSTAAR ECR(2) Compare “On Civil Disobedience” with The Crucible2. Love is only worthwhile if it is difficult.3/1/24: The Impact of Emmett Till's Murder on 1955 America3-22 Failure SCR3. You should only date people with a similar background to yours.4. Love should always be defended.4th Cultural Landscape of South Africa in Trevor Noah's 'Born a Crime'4th Grade CMAS Practice- Writing504 - Opinion Text - Body Paragraph507 - Opinion Text - Body Paragraph MEES5. Parents should have a say in who you date.6. It is better to have loved and lost than to have never loved at all.6th Performance Task #16th Performance Task #37.3 L7 Mastery Check7.3 L9 Mastery Check7th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 10 SCR7th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 1 SCR7th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 8 SCR7th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 9 SCR7. You must always stand up for what you believe in, no matter how hard it is.8. Teenagers can’t understand what true love really is.8. Teenagers can’t understand what true love really is.8th ELA Day 8 STAAR Blitz SCR8th ELA SB Unit 4 Embedded Assessment: Writing an Analysis of a Humorous Text8th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 10 SCR8th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 1 SCR8th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 4 SCR8th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 6 ECR8th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 7 SCR Writing8th ELA STAAR Blitz Day 9 SCR9. Love at first sight is real.9th Spring Benchmark 9-Week Book Literary AnalysisAbigail Williams Question- Argument paragraphAbstract 1Abstract contentAbstract - Content