Status Updates From Montana 1948
Montana 1948 by
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Joon Jang
is on page 169 of 186
In the epilogue, the novel ends with a clear idea about justice and law but it is still really disturbing. Things ended, but it does not give you a feeling that everything is okay. I think that is what the author wants. The author wants the reader to think about what happened and how it affects the characters. The epilogue shows how the things that happened to Davy changed him for the rest of his life.
— Dec 17, 2025 05:04PM
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Joon Jang
is on page 155 of 186
Frank's suicide was truly vivid and realistic. At first, I couldn't understand at all why Frank committed suicide. However, after thinking about it carefully, I believe Frank committed suicide to escape the guilt and responsibility for what he had done for Indian girls which is really irresponsible and ugly. Frank killing himself to just avoid his consequence is bad and I couldn't accept his actions positively.
— Dec 17, 2025 05:02PM
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Joon Jang
is on page 101 of 186
Davy’s changing emotions were clearly delivered. I understood that Davy and his family were becoming increasingly exhausted. Moreover, I am really noticing how quiet and tense everything feels. The wide empty land in Montana makes the silence. It is like there is nowhere to hide even though people in Montana 1948 are trying to hide. Montana 1948 is a story where the author, Watson does not rush anything.
— Dec 17, 2025 04:59PM
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