Tuck Everlasting: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[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]]
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[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Tuck Everlasting]]
[[Category:Tuck Everlasting]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Revision as of 14:48, 26 January 2014

Tuck Everlasting is a 1975 Fantasy novel exploring Immortality and 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 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 by the novel: