“Some people feel that growing older makes you wiser, why does kemp feel like it is going to be the end of the world when he does lose his youth?”
Yeah, it definitely says a lot about the person Kemp that he is entirely unable to see the benefits of aging. Kemp is not at all interested in things like learning and becoming wise. All he cares about is doing things. His greatest fear is dying without having left a mark on society, which is why he left Missouri for New York and New York for Puerto Rico. He goes wherever there is some faint glimmer of hope that he can make his mark on the world. Kemp simply does not see the wisdom that comes with aging as something that can aid him in that quest; all he wants to do is keep running towards fame and never slow down. And he believes that aging will force him to slow down.
“…why did you pick this topic?”
I had watched a documentary about Hunter S. Thompson and he seemed like a really interesting guy. I have some videos at the bottom of my page that will give you some idea of what I mean. The one with the motorcycle tire in the thumbnail is especially interesting. I also knew that he wrote about politics, individuality, and insanity, which seemed like topics I would enjoy reading about.
Even though the News is based in Puerto Rico, its relationships with the locals is generally not one of understanding.
As an English-language newspaper, the News is staffed by white Americans and most of whom, like Kemp, have recently moved to the island. The Americans who work for the newspaper see themselves as superior to the natives, who appear unsophisticated and poor in comparison. Therefore, Whites in San Juan are portrayed as being bigoted towards the natives whenever the two interact. As soon as Kemp arrives at the headquarters of the News, he sees evidence of these tensions. Pulling up in front of the Daily News headquarters, Kemp sees, “a gang of about twenty Puerto Ricans, attacking a tall American in a tan suit,”(14). These Puerto Ricans are later revealed to be union members on a wildcat strike (that is, a strike that is not officially sponsored by any union). The American’s fight with the union members is symbolic of the larger struggle which has traditionally taken place between the haves and the have-nots. Whether it’s the French Revolution, a writer’s strike, or Puerto Ricans fighting Americans, it’s always the same theme: the oppressed hate the privileged and vice-versa.
The city of San Juan itself is a metaphor for this division between Americans and Puerto Ricans. It is on a peninsula jutting into the Atlantic to the North, as though trying to flee from Puerto Rico to Florida. This separation becomes very clear to Kemp on his first trip outside of San Juan. Describing his excursion outside of San Juan, Kemp narrates,“…the sea on my left, a huge swamp on my right…past wooden shacks full of silent, staring natives, swerving to avoid chickens and cows in the road,…and feeling for the first time since leaving New York that I had actually come to the Caribbean,”(36). Compare this to Kemp’s description of Americanized San Juan, “On the other side[of the road] were homes that once looked out on the beach. Now they looked out on hotels…”(12-13). The rapid development of San Juan signified in this passage is a sharp contrast to the static nature of the main body of Puerto Rico, which continues to be poor and almost “uncivilized” in comparison. San Juan feels like a city where Americans were forced to go, against their will (the growth of San Juan was triggered by the establishment of a U.S. Naval Reservation there), and then figured that as long as they were there, they may as well make it as close as possible to home, so they shoved away the uncivilized nature of the place and then simply plopped a modern American city onto the island. And the Americans continue to hate the backwardness of Puerto Rico which is why they are portrayed as hating the natives so much. It will be very interesting to see how Kemp will come to view the natives. Will he grow to hate them for being uneducated and uncivilized or will he hate the Americans for oppressing them? A clear answer has not surfaced yet, so it will be important to keep watching.