Is Tuck Psychic?

So I just finished rereading Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt, and while it was a lovely little book, I’m left with one nagging curiosity… Is old Tuck psychic or sensitive in some way?

I marked the instances in my copy of the book, and I’ll list them quickly now. (I’m using the paperback published in 2007 for page numbers.) Fair warning, this post does contain spoilers!

On page 10, Mae states her intention to ride into Treegap and meet her sons on their way home. Tuck tells her that she “better not do that” and she pooh-poohs his concerns, saying that no one will notice or remember her. As you know if you read the books, she isn’t nearly as inconspicuous as she thinks she will be, and her visit could be said to be one of the main factors that leads to all the trouble. (I say one, because obviously Jesse’s carelessness is another.)

Page 58, the Tucks have Winnie at their place and old Tuck announces that he has a feeling they don’t have as much time to explain things to Winnie as they think and he’d better get to it right away. Everyone scoffs at this statement and writes it off immediately, but as the reader knows, the man in the yellow suit has been sneaking around ready to cause trouble.

Lastly, page 67, after the horse is stolen Tuck wonders if it wasn’t something more than a random horse thief, and perhaps someone set out to steal their horse in particular for some nefarious reason. Again he is shut down quickly, but the reader learns in the very next chapter that the man in the yellow suit has taken the horse and ridden straight to Winnie Foster’s home to speak to her parents!

I made a little note in my book that old Tuck seemed to have all his stats in wisdom, but I can’t help but wonder if he has a little psychic sensitivity as well…

Words from Books

succor

/’səkər/
noun / verb

  1. (noun) assistance and support in times of hardship and distress
  2. (verb) give assistance or aid to
She had not sought his comfort in years, trying as she was to grow up, to be independent and queenly enough not to hurt, but she longed for his succor now.

– Shannon Hale, The Goose Girl

Life & Reading Update

Man I feel awful I haven’t been posting anything except for scheduled posts practically all year!

Some big changes have been happening in my life and I just haven’t been bothering to get online much.

I won’t go into all the gory details here, but basically in January I found out that my husband wasn’t who I thought he was and since then a lot has changed. He moved out in March and we are getting a divorce. I was really cut up about it for a short time, but then I got some amazing advice from a coworker that really changed how I was looking at things and now I’m feeling like this is more of an opportunity than a loss. Since March I’ve been meeting new people and doing a lot more outside the house. All of which has been keeping me from reading much and from getting online at all.

In addition to all that drama, I started working in January which was a first for me in several years. I’m enjoying that a lot, but I’m still figuring out how to balance my work and free time so that’s kept me from reading and going online as well.

But sometime in April I picked up a book written by a good friend of mine and it just sucked me right in and pulled me out of my reading slump and since then I’ve been reading regularly again, even if not quite as much as I did when I didn’t work or ever go out.

Next step is getting back to being active here, because I miss talking to all the fun book bloggers and I miss making posts about what I’m reading. I’m going to play catch up on my Monthly Wrap-Up posts, but other than that I’m just going to try to pick up where I left off. Wish me luck!

Words from Books

ebullient

/iˈbo͝olyənt/ or /iˈbəlyənt/
adjective

  1. cheerful and full of energy
Bad:  Twice Ronan got a phone call from his Ganseyfriend and both times he did not say anything to the phone, just listened to the ebullient patter on the other end and made grunting sounds in response.

– Maggie Stiefvater, Opal