Tuck Everlasting: Difference between revisions

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''[[Tuck Everlasting]]'' is a 1975 [[Fantasy]] novel exploring [[Immortality]] and [[Who Wants to Live Forever|whether it's worth it.]]
''[[Tuck Everlasting]]'' is a 1975 [[Fantasy]] novel exploring [[Immortality]] and [[Who Wants to Live Forever?|whether it's worth it.]]


In the late 1800's, Winnie Foster's life is boring. Nothing exciting ever happens, and being in a family of strait-laced [[Blue Blood|blue bloods]] has cramped her style. She goes out exploring in the woods one day and meets the Tucks. The Tucks became immortal after drinking water from a spring. She is fascinated by Jesse Tuck, a boy who's really [[Really Seven Hundred Years Old|104 years old]]. The family shares with her the secrets of the spring. However, a man in a yellow suit is also after the secret behind the Tucks' immortality. The Tucks are threatened by the man in a yellow suit until they are in grave danger. Winnie must choose whether to live forever, and find how to save the Tucks.
In the late 1800s, Winnie Foster's life is boring. Nothing exciting ever happens, and being in a family of straight-laced [[Blue Blood|blue bloods]] has cramped her style. She goes out exploring in the woods one day and meets the Tucks. The Tucks became immortal after drinking water from a spring. She is fascinated by Jesse Tuck, a boy who's really [[Really Seven Hundred Years Old|104 years old]]. The family shares with her the secrets of the spring. However, a man in a yellow suit is also after the secret behind the Tucks' immortality. The Tucks are threatened by the man in a yellow suit until they are in grave danger. Winnie must choose whether to live forever, and find how to save the Tucks.


The story has been adapted into a film twice: in 1981 by Office of Communications and in 2002 by [[Disney|Walt Disney Productions]].
The story has been adapted into a film twice: in 1981 by Office of Communications and in 2002 by [[Disney|Walt Disney Productions]].

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{{tropelist}}
==== Tropes used by the novel: ====
* [[Adaptation Expansion]]: Some [[Filler|padding]] is to be expected. The book isn't very long after all.
* [[Adaptation Expansion]]: Some [[Filler|padding]] is to be expected. The book isn't very long after all.
* [[American Civil War]]: Miles was a soldier in the recent movie
* [[American Civil War]]: Miles was a soldier in the recent movie
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* [[Can't Grow Up]]: Obviously.
* [[Can't Grow Up]]: Obviously.
* [[Complete Immortality]]: They don't age and they are [[Nigh Invulnerable]].
* [[Complete Immortality]]: They don't age and they are [[Nigh Invulnerable]].
* [[Deal With the Devil]]: The Tucks are suspected of this in-story.
* [[Deal with the Devil]]: The Tucks are suspected of this in-story.
* [[Evil Detecting Dog|Evil Detecting Cows]]: The first chapter of the book has the cows sensing something very wrong with the forest itself and quickly going around it.
* [[Evil-Detecting Dog|Evil Detecting Cows]]: The first chapter of the book has the cows sensing something very wrong with the forest itself and quickly going around it.
* [[The Film of the Book]]: There are two different adaptations.
* [[The Film of the Book]]: There are two different adaptations.
* [[Immortal Procreation Clause]]: The Tucks don't age, they don't die. Mrs. Tuck was past childbearing age when she drank from the spring, so it isn't an issue for the elder Tucks. However, the eldest Tuck son got married in the years after they drank from the spring and before they realized its effects; he had children, but his wife eventually thought he'd made a [[Deal With the Devil]] and left him.
* [[Immortal Procreation Clause]]: The Tucks don't age, they don't die. Mrs. Tuck was past childbearing age when she drank from the spring, so it isn't an issue for the elder Tucks. However, the eldest Tuck son got married in the years after they drank from the spring and before they realized its effects; he had children, but his wife eventually thought he'd made a [[Deal with the Devil]] and left him.
* [[Mama Bear]]: Mae's usually very sweet, but she {{spoiler|kills The Man in the Yellow Suit}} to protect her family. Not to mention kidnapping Winnie for the same reason.
* [[Mama Bear]]: Mae's usually very sweet, but she {{spoiler|kills The Man in the Yellow Suit}} to protect her family. Not to mention kidnapping Winnie for the same reason.
** She's also this to Winnie. {{spoiler|That's the main reason she kills The Man in the Yellow Suit. She didn't want him to force Winnie to drink the spring water and condemn her to an eternity of loneliness.}}
** She's also this to Winnie. {{spoiler|That's the main reason she kills The Man in the Yellow Suit. She didn't want him to force Winnie to drink the spring water and condemn her to an eternity of loneliness.}}
* [[Mayfly December Romance]]: Winnie (who is ten years old in the novel) wants to marry Jesse when she turns seventeen. In the movie, the changed her to be fifteen.
* [[Mayfly-December Romance]]: Winnie (who is ten years old in the novel) wants to marry Jesse when she turns seventeen. In the movie, the changed her to be fifteen.
* [[The Men in Black]]: The man in the yellow suit
* [[The Men in Black]]: The man in the yellow suit
* [[My Beloved Smother]]
* [[My Beloved Smother]]
* [[No Name Given]]/[[Everyone Calls Him Barkeep]]: The Man in the Yellow Suit
* [[No Name Given]]/[[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"]]: The Man in the Yellow Suit
* [[Pistol Whipping]]: {{spoiler|Mae Tuck smacks The Man in the Yellow Suit with a shotgun, fracturing his skull.}}
* [[Pistol-Whipping]]: {{spoiler|Mae Tuck smacks The Man in the Yellow Suit with a shotgun, fracturing his skull.}}
* [[Stockholm Syndrome]]: Winnie is technically kidnapped by the Tucks, but they didn't mean any harm by it.
* [[Stockholm Syndrome]]: Winnie is technically kidnapped by the Tucks, but they didn't mean any harm by it.
* [[Victorian Britain|Victorian America]]/[[The Edwardian Era]]
* [[Victorian Britain|Victorian America]]/[[The Edwardian Era]]
* [[Who Wants to Live Forever]]: This is a major theme.
* [[Who Wants to Live Forever?]]: This is a major theme.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Fantasy Literature]]
[[Category:Fantasy Literature]]
[[Category:Young Adult Literature]]
[[Category:Young Adult Literature]]
[[Category:Childrens Literature]]
[[Category:Children's Literature]]
[[Category:Films of the 1980s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1980s]]
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Tuck Everlasting]]
[[Category:Tuck Everlasting]]
[[Category:Trope]]
[[Category:Multiple Works Need Separate Pages]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Literature of the 1970s]]

Latest revision as of 16:29, 7 May 2024

Tuck Everlasting is a 1975 Fantasy novel exploring Immortality and whether it's worth it.

In the late 1800s, Winnie Foster's life is boring. Nothing exciting ever happens, and being in a family of straight-laced blue bloods has cramped her style. She goes out exploring in the woods one day and meets the Tucks. The Tucks became immortal after drinking water from a spring. She is fascinated by Jesse Tuck, a boy who's really 104 years old. The family shares with her the secrets of the spring. However, a man in a yellow suit is also after the secret behind the Tucks' immortality. The Tucks are threatened by the man in a yellow suit until they are in grave danger. Winnie must choose whether to live forever, and find how to save the Tucks.

The story has been adapted into a film twice: in 1981 by Office of Communications and in 2002 by Walt Disney Productions.

Tropes used in Tuck Everlasting include: