Big Fish

Big Fish

by Daniel Wallace

Edward Bloom (William’s Father) Character Analysis

Edward Bloom, William’s father and Sandra’s husband, is one of the story’s two protagonists. Edward is about to die of cancer when the story starts, and William narrates the story of Edward’s life as a series of metaphorical tales, which are peppered between passages that describe Edward’s illness and death. The metaphorical tales, many of which Edward made up himself, transfigure Edward into a mythic hero of sorts who has to overcome many fantastical challenges in his life using little more than his wits. In these stories, Edward is depicted as an ambitious man who is hungry for life and adventure. Edward sees himself as a big fish who always seeks deeper and wider water to swim in so that he can keep growing larger—a metaphor for the way that he perpetually seeks new challenges and experiences in life to make him grow as a person. Because of his courage and perseverance, Edward winds up having a fascinating, worldly life, but on the flipside, he is absent from home a lot and far from perfect. His absences make him an “itinerant father” to William, and he also has a long-term affair with a woman named Jenny Hill, which casts further doubt on his merits as a father and husband. Despite his flaws, Edward is a fiercely loving and protective father, and he experiences a deep and loving bond with his wife, Sandra. Edward finds profound value in laughter, and he is always cracking terrible jokes to lift people’s spirits, no matter how inappropriate they find this—even in his dying moments.

Edward Bloom (William’s Father) Quotes in Big Fish

The Big Fish quotes below are all either spoken by Edward Bloom (William’s Father) or refer to Edward Bloom (William’s Father). For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
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).

Part 1: In Which He Speaks to Animals Quotes

My father had a way with animals, everyone said so.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 1: His Great Promise Quotes

Edward Bloom used his time wisely, reading. He read almost every book there was in Ashland. A thousand books—some say ten thousand. History, Art, Philosophy. Horatio Alger. It didn’t matter. He read them all. Even the telephone book.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 1: My Father’s Death: Take 1 Quotes

An itinerant dad, home for him was a stop on his way somewhere else, working toward a goal that was unclear. […] It was as though he lived in a state of constant aspiration: getting there, wherever it was, wasn’t the important thing: it was the battle, and the battle after that, and the war was never ending.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Sandra (William’s Mother) , Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 15
Explanation and Analysis:

At home, the magic of his absence yielded to the ordinariness of his presence. He drank a bit. He didn’t become angry, but frustrated and lost, as though he had fallen into a hole. On those first nights home his eyes were so bright you would swear they glowed in the dark, but then after a few days his eyes became weary. He began to seem out of his element and he suffered for it.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Sandra (William’s Mother)
Page Number and Citation: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

“Remembering a man’s stories makes him immortal, did you know that?”

Related Characters: Edward Bloom (William’s Father) (speaker), William Bloom
Page Number and Citation: 20
Explanation and Analysis:

“I wanted to be a great man […] I thought it was my destiny. A big fish in a big pond—that’s what I wanted.”

Related Characters: Edward Bloom (William’s Father) (speaker), William Bloom
Related Symbols: Big Fish, Water and Swimming
Page Number and Citation: 21
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 1: How He Tamed the Giant Quotes

“I don’t want to eat anybody […] I just get so hungry.”

Related Characters: Karl the Giant (speaker), William Bloom, Karl’s Mother, Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 1: The Day He Left Ashland Quotes

“That’s what this place is all about, Edward. Getting used to things […] This rain, this dampness—it’s a kind of residue. The residue of a dream. Of lots of dreams, actually.”

Related Characters: Willie (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), William Bloom, Dog
Related Symbols: The Place That Had No Name
Page Number and Citation: 42
Explanation and Analysis:

“I—I wouldn’t trust that dog […] I just wouldn’t take the chance, son. He didn’t get you before, but you never know about next time. S’unpredictable. So sit tight.”

Related Characters: Man Even Older Than Willie (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Willie , Dog, William Bloom
Related Symbols: The Place That Had No Name
Page Number and Citation: 47
Explanation and Analysis:

My father took his chance and ran through the opening and didn’t look back. He ran through the darkness until it became light again, and the world turned green and wonderful […] When the road ended he stopped and breathed and found that Dog was right behind him, tongue lolling, and when he reached my father, he rubbed his warm body down against his legs.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Dog
Related Symbols: The Place That Had No Name
Page Number and Citation: 48
Explanation and Analysis:

And the sun set, and the moon rose, and the water in the lake began to gently ripple, and in the white light of the moon then he saw the girl, her head breaking the surface a good ways out, the water flowing through her hair and back into the lake, and she was smiling.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Dog, River Girl, Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Related Symbols: Big Fish, Water and Swimming, The Place That Had No Name
Page Number and Citation: 49
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 1: Entering a New World Quotes

“At the time, of course, dying in the dark of that strange wood, he was far from grateful. But by morning he was well rested, and, though bleeding still from various parts of his body, he began walking, no longer knowing or caring where he was going, but just walking, forward, onward, ready for whatever Life and Fate chose to hurl at him next […].”

Related Characters: Jasper “Buddy” Barron (speaker), William Bloom, Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 52
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: The Old Lady and the Eye Quotes

And as the old lady drew near they could see that it was here indeed, not in the box but back in the old lady’s head. […] And though they would have turned away they couldn’t, and as she looked at each of them, each of them in turn stared deeply into the old lady’s eye, and it was said that within the eye each of them could see their future.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Don Price (Gang Leader) , Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Old Lady
Page Number and Citation: 63
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: My Father’s Death: Take 2 Quotes

“But a joke […] It’s funny for a minute or two and that’s it. You’re left with nothing. Even if you changed your mind every other day I’d rather—I wished you’d shared some of these things with me. Even your doubts would have been better than a constant stream of jokes.”

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 73
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: The Fight Quotes

Simply by being who he was—no more, no less—my father was winning my mother’s heart.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Sandra (William’s Mother) , Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 81
Explanation and Analysis:

They fell into a kiss.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Sandra (William’s Mother) , Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Don Price (Gang Leader)
Page Number and Citation: 85
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: His Three Labors Quotes

My father cleaned this mess up every morning and every evening. He did it until the cages shone, until you could have eaten a meal off the surface of the floor, so spotless and clean had he left it.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Sandra (William’s Mother)
Page Number and Citation: 91
Explanation and Analysis:

“This is the girdle I’ve been waiting for all my life! And to think that you—you—I’ve been so unfair! Can you ever forgive me?”

Related Characters: Muriel Rainwater (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Sandra (William’s Mother) , William Bloom
Page Number and Citation: 95
Explanation and Analysis:

However, the big black Helldog was aggravated. Edward had rudely come between him and a meal.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Sandra (William’s Mother) , Jennifer Morgan
Page Number and Citation: 99
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: My Father’s Death: Take 3 Quotes

“You’re not necessarily supposed to believe it […] You’re just supposed to believe in it. It’s like—a metaphor.”

Related Characters: Edward Bloom (William’s Father) (speaker), William Bloom
Page Number and Citation: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: How He Saw Me Quotes

While my mother took care of the day-to-day things, he brought vision to the task. He made a list of the virtues he possessed and wanted to pass on to me: perseverance, ambition, personality, optimism, strength, intelligence, imagination.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Sandra (William’s Mother) , Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 122
Explanation and Analysis:

The very idea of coming home at the same time every single day made him nauseated. Regardless of how much he loved his wife, his son, he could only stand so much love. […] He needed a break.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father), Sandra (William’s Mother)
Page Number and Citation: 123
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: His Greatest Power Quotes

But he liked to leave me laughing. This is how he wanted to remember me, and how he wanted to be remembered. Of all his greatest powers, this was perhaps his most extraordinary: at any time, at the drop of a hat, he could really break me up.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 130
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 2: In Which He Has a Dream Quotes

He made me laugh.

Related Characters: Old Man (speaker), Sandra (William’s Mother) , Edward Bloom (William’s Father), William Bloom
Page Number and Citation: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 3: In Which He Buys a Town, and More Quotes

The swamp stops growing after a certain point, when the house is surrounded on all sides by yards of deep, dark, mossy water. And my father returns, finally, and sees what has happened, but by this time the swamp is too deep, the house too far away, and though he sees her glowing there he can’t have her, and so he has to come back to us.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Jenny Hill , Sandra (William’s Mother) , Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Related Symbols: The Swamp
Page Number and Citation: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 3: My Father’s Death: Take 4 Quotes

There’s this man, and he’s a poor man, but he needs a suit, and—

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Page Number and Citation: 174
Explanation and Analysis:

Part 3: Big Fish Quotes

And that’s when I discovered that my father hadn’t been dying after all. He was just changing, transforming himself into something new and different to carry his life forward in. All this time, my father was becoming a fish.

Related Characters: William Bloom (speaker), Edward Bloom (William’s Father)
Related Symbols: Big Fish, Water and Swimming
Page Number and Citation: 180
Explanation and Analysis:
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Edward Bloom (William’s Father) Character Timeline in Big Fish

The timeline below shows where the character Edward Bloom (William’s Father) appears in Big Fish. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Prelude
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William Bloom is on a car trip with his father, Edward Bloom, shortly before the end of his “father’s life as a man.” They stop by... (full context)
Part 1: The Day He Was Born
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William describes his father’s birth. Edward is born during a drought in Alabama. The food and the water have dried up,... (full context)
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...cloud on the horizon and the whole town goes out to watch it, just as Edward’s mother goes into labor. Edward’s father steps out to look at the cloud. She screams... (full context)
Part 1: In Which He Speaks to Animals
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William says his father, Edward, has a way with animals as a boy. Raccoons eat out of Edward’s hands, birds... (full context)
Part 1: The Year it Snowed in Alabama
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Although it never snows in Alabama, it does snow the winter that Edward is nine. The snow comes down hard and fast, covering everything in ice. Edward and... (full context)
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The next day, it’s stopped snowing, so Edward’s mother says Edward better get himself to school. As Edward’s walking, he passes by a... (full context)
Part 1: His Great Promise
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People say that Edward never forgets a name, face, color, nor even the sound of different people’s shoes as... (full context)
Part 1: My Father’s Death: Take 1
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...long as William can remember. William’s mother smiles bitterly. She’s a shadow of herself. When Edward came home to die, it killed them all a bit. It’s as if Edward’s been... (full context)
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...dying is the worst thing to happen to anyone, but especially to his father, because Edward hates being stuck at home and living the same rhythm every day. Before his illness,... (full context)
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In his illness, Edward seems more ordinary than “magic.” He drinks. His bright eyes have become dim and weary.... (full context)
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Edward says his own father wasn’t around much either, recalling a time when Edward’s father hopped... (full context)
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Edward recalls starting out “small.” He worked for others and started businesses that failed. Eventually, he... (full context)
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Edward becomes calm and closes his eyes. It's the beginning of the end. Edward murmurs something... (full context)
Part 1: The Girl in the River
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There’s a shady oak tree near the Blue River where Edward usually stops and rests. One day, as he’s napping in the shady moss, he spots... (full context)
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It’s true, of course. They both know Edward risked his life to save her. The river girl says he’s brave and asks his... (full context)
Part 1: His Quiet Charm
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William recalls that people think Edward has a special quiet charm that draws women to him despite his shyness. He’s handsome... (full context)
Part 1: How He Tamed the Giant
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William says Edward has many stories, but the most “formidable” is about facing Karl the Giant. Though Karl’s... (full context)
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Edward calls out for Karl, who emerges, looking grizzly and wild. Edward explains that Karl has... (full context)
Part 1: In Which He Goes Fishing
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...reflects that “only a fool or hero” would try to catch one, but he supposes Edward’s a “bit of both,” as that’s exactly what Edward tries to do, using mice for... (full context)
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Edward sees the flooded homes, farms, and people who lived there going about their business as... (full context)
Part 1: The Day He Left Ashland
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Edward Bloom has grown into a healthy, strong, well-liked man, who eats and drinks with gusto.... (full context)
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Edward leaves Ashland on a bright day. It grows darker and foggier as he approaches “the... (full context)
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Edward meets a shriveled old man named Willie. Edward says he’s just passing through, but Willie... (full context)
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Edward spots a generic-looking dog emerging from the fog. Willie smiles, saying the dog has no... (full context)
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Edward and Willie enter the Good Food Cafe, a gray, lifeless place. The pallid diners smile,... (full context)
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A man even older than Willie warns Edward not to face Dog again, saying he’s unpredictable and it’s better for Edward to sit... (full context)
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...Dog approaches, growling, with his “terrible” teeth bared. The crowd back away in fear and Edward jumps at the chance to escape, running into the darkness without looking back. The sky... (full context)
Part 1: Entering a New World
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William describes Jasper “Buddy” Barron, Edward’s business partner at Bloom Inc. as a sharp dresser with a bright yellow tie, crisp... (full context)
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On that fateful night, however, Edward is anything but grateful. Nonetheless, after a good night’s sleep, Edward walks on, battered, but... (full context)
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The family gather around Edward as if they’re in a renaissance painting. Suddenly, Edward opens his eyes and utters a... (full context)
Part 2: The Old Lady and the Eye
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Edward leaves Jimson’s store and decides to attend college, so he heads for Auburn. When he... (full context)
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The gang who stole the eye takes turns to watch it every night. Edward decides to befriend the group to learn more. After asking around, Edward’s told to come... (full context)
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In the morning Edward returns to the barn and hands over an empty box. The gang leader lunges at... (full context)
Part 2: My Father’s Death: Take 2
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...his mother have been expecting this. They sigh, with a mixture of sadness and relief. Edward’s been dying for so long that it seemed he might just have kept on “dying... (full context)
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The curtains are drawn and room is dim and gray, like an afternoon nap. Edward looks happy, sad, tired, and blessed—and sort of “curdled”—all at once. Edward drinks water shakily,... (full context)
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William reflects that he thought he’d spend today in the pool before because Edward likes the sound of splashing water. Slowly, Edward says “I’ll miss you,” and William responds... (full context)
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Edward shifts uncomfortably. He’s never felt comfortable facing the question. Some days he does believe in... (full context)
Part 2: His First Great Love
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Edward falls in love with Sandra, “the most beautiful woman” in Alabama, which is a “misfortune”... (full context)
Part 2: His Legendary Legs
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Edward runs so fast that it seems as if he flies above the ground. Many people... (full context)
Part 2: In Which He Makes His Move
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Edward starts following Sandra around and becomes obsessed with her. He’s compelled to bump into her... (full context)
Part 2: The Fight
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Although Edward can hold his own when challenged, he prefers to resolve things by talking than fighting.... (full context)
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Edward and Sandra are driving at night when a car dangerously speeds towards them. The car... (full context)
Part 2: On Meeting the In-Laws
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...In his senile old age, Mr. Templeton even thinks Sandra hung the moon for him. Edward and Sandra are nervous because they eloped without telling her father and are driving to... (full context)
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When they go inside, Edward explains—with carefully thought out “simple, yet profound words”—that he loves Sandra and he’s going to... (full context)
Part 2: His Three Labors
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Edward and Sandra move to Birmingham, Alabama. Though Edward’s reputation as an intelligent, resourceful man precedes... (full context)
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Edward’s second labor is working as a sales clerk in the lingerie section of a department... (full context)
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Edward’s third labor involves a wild dog. Edward has been promoted to manager at the department... (full context)
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...one “crazed, lunatic dog” who terrorizes the locals as if he’s stalking prey. One night, Edward is taking a walk and sees three-year-old Jennifer Morgan wander out into the street towards... (full context)
Part 2: He Goes to War
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Edward becomes—of course—a sailor during the war, and sails on a ship called the Neried, which... (full context)
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Edward finds a clear spot and jumps 20 feet, before sinking 40 feet below the surface,... (full context)
Part 2: My Father’s Death: Take 3
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...as Dr. Bennet sinks dejected into a chair, as if unable to fathom the great Edward Bloom—the “god of laughter,” or a demi-god who’s descended to make the world a place... (full context)
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William walks in, knowing that it would take a miracle from “Zeus himself” for Edward to escape his fate today. Edward’s body is withered by lesions and scaly skin. He’s... (full context)
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William interrupts to say “no more stories” or “stupid jokes,” imploring Edward to talk to him “man to man, father to son.” Edward begins a story about... (full context)
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William reflects to himself that Edward’s “just being him, something he can’t not be,” which is a layer of “facades” masking... (full context)
Part 2: The Day I Was Born
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William says that the day he’s born, Edward Bloom is mowing the lawn while smoking and listening to the radio, captivated by the... (full context)
Part 2: How He Saw Me
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Despite the fact that William emerges into the world without a “halo” or a “glow,” Edward adores him and is overcome with joy as he visualizes William’s future, with all its... (full context)
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In William’s first weeks, Edward seems deeper and more thoughtful. He writes down a list of “virtues” he wants to... (full context)
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William grows quickly over the years, and Sandra evolves too. Edward feels like a stranger to William when he comes home. Before this time, however, Edward... (full context)
Part 2: How He Saved My Life
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William explains that Edward Bloom saved his life twice (that he knows of). As a child, William is fascinated... (full context)
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The second time Edward saves William, they’ve just moved to a new house on Mayfair Drive. William is swinging... (full context)
Part 2: His Immortality
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Early on, William believes that Edward will probably live forever. One day, Edward falls off the roof after climbing a ladder... (full context)
Part 2: His Greatest Power
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When Edward left Ashland, he vowed to see the world, and he does. Edward explores far and... (full context)
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...begins to say “Your father’s on the roof…” This is how William likes to remember Edward. On the roof, well dressed, looking around, smiling and winking at William as he falls—in... (full context)
Part 2: In Which He Has a Dream
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While on his deathbed, Edward has a dream about his own death that’s also, in a way, a dream about... (full context)
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Suddenly, the crowd gasps as Edward emerges at the window, waving and beaming at everyone in turn. Voices fill the air... (full context)
Part 3: In Which He Buys a Town, and More
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Edward has become wealthy from smart investments, and the family moves to a bigger house. Edward... (full context)
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Edward starts spending money in unpredictable ways as he turns 40 and realizes something’s missing in... (full context)
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Edward falls in love with Specter’s dilapidated, simple charm and decides to buy the town. It... (full context)
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Jenny Hill politely declines, and Edward is getting desperate. She explains that she doesn’t need money and she’s perfectly happy with... (full context)
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The townsfolk think Edward is “wise and good and kind” so they don’t question Edward’s actions, although they do... (full context)
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...never happened.” People forget and remember the wrong things so that “what’s left is fiction.” Edward and Jenny never marry, so people make up stories about how they met, and how... (full context)
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Jenny is young and beautiful but longs for Edward. She stares out of the window all day. She stares so much that people think... (full context)
Part 3: How It Ends
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...ending. He’s making a sandwich in the kitchen while Sandra dusts the window frames and Edward walks in. He looks terrible. Sandra looks desperately at Edward, though she knows what he’s... (full context)
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Edward doesn’t die yet. He starts swimming instead. He swims every day and takes to the... (full context)
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William admits that Edward’s final journey is a good thing. He sees Edward more than when Edward was well,... (full context)
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William recites some bad jokes, explaining that they’re not even funny anymore. Edward, Sandra, and William are biding their time until the end. Sometimes, Edward is so tired... (full context)
Part 3: My Father’s Death: Take 4
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...Jefferson Memorial Hospital. Sandra leaves occasionally to talk to the doctors, but William just holds Edward’s hand and waits. The doctors, spearheaded by Dr. Bennett, are distinguished specialists who say fancy... (full context)
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...noting they’re not “life,” but “life support.” It all reminds William of a joke that Edward always tells: there’s this man, who’s poor, but he needs a new suit. He searches... (full context)
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Edward, who probably realizes William really needs a joke right about now, wakes, briefly. Edward pleads... (full context)
Part 3: Big Fish
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To William’s delight, Edward smiles and winks. Edward urges William to sneak him out of the hospital in a... (full context)
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Love, Flaws, and Acceptance Theme Icon
They pull up by an oak tree on a mossy bank, just as Edward described. William carries Edward to the water, and Edward tells William to say goodbye to... (full context)