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One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Book Report

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I read the very intriguing book One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey. I chose this book because I saw the movie and was very moved by it, so when I saw that it was a book, I did not hesitate to embrace reading it. This controversial novel shows how much power that authority figures truly posses. This is portrayed when a criminal in the mid 1950’s, Randle “Mac” Mcmurphy pleads insanity and is therefore sent to a realistic mental asylum In Oregon, where he spent most of his time in the book. Randle then commences in his “hell raising” for the head head of staff, Nurse Ratched, against her strict ward policies along with her “disciplinary actions.” He then, as the book continues on, starts to display to his fellow patients that not all …show more content…
From friend, to foe, it takes a great majority of the patients until the end of the novel to realize his motives were never misleading, he was truthfully there friend. Nevertheless, Nurse Ratched felt the need to make him seem like their enemy, so as to control Mcmurphy and break his willpower down. She deceives them, by lightly implanting fabricated truths about Mcmurphy’s motives into his fellow patients head’s. As the saying goes, one little flea can drive a big dog crazy, it also relates directly to this situation, one little lie can drive a man into insanity. These deceptive lies though, are very compelling and conceivable, as even, I the reader, fell for them at times, which made my viewpoint of the characters blurry at times. It was not such a fine line on the difference between the good, and the deceptive. As the novel continues on however, Nurse Ratched’s lies become less believable as the more frantic she gets, and Mcmurphy is more clearly seen as an ally and friend of the patients. The more frustrated she gets, the more that the other patients start to believe less of her and more of Mcmurphy. Being Bromden is usually siding with his fellow patients, for the sake of the argument, it is easy to portray their thoughts and actions, and see what they truly believe. Throughout the whole story they are trying to identify the truth from the fictional lies, and Bromden successfully describes their process as they sort through it all trying to find

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