One of the main reasons that 12-year-old Rob and his father move following Rob’s mother’s death is to essentially run away from their support system and their friends, who insist on talking about Rob’s mother when talking about her is the last thing Rob and his father want to do. But in Lister, Rob in particular finds himself unmoored, unsupported, and merely existing rather than actually living—something that the novel suggests is, at least in part, a consequence of not having close relationships with anyone else. Rob finds that after befriending Sistine and motel housekeeper Willie May, he has people who not only care about him, but who he’d like to impress and make proud. This encourages him to step into a more active role in his own life and, by freeing Beauchamp’s caged tiger, stand up to Beauchamp’s cruelty and entitlement. And Rob’s friendship helps Sistine come to terms with the fact that her father actually isn’t coming to rescue her, as Rob’s friendship provides Sistine something to look forward to in Lister beyond leaving. Through Rob’s burgeoning friendships with both Sistine and Willie May, the novel highlights the numerous powers of friendship. Friendship can, it shows, help a person make more moral decisions, find the strength to stand up to injustice, offer much-needed support, and ultimately, make life worth living.
Friendship and Support ThemeTracker
Friendship and Support Quotes in The Tiger Rising
Chapter 7 Quotes
“Please let me catch it,” she whispered.
“You won’t,” said Rob, surprised at her hand, how small it was and how warm. It made him think, for a minute, of his mother’s hand, tiny and soft. He stopped that thought. “It ain’t contagious,” he told her.
“Please let me catch it,” Sistine whispered again, ignoring him, keeping her hand on his leg. “Please let me catch it so I won’t have to go to school.”
Chapter 8 Quotes
He stayed up late working on the carving, and when he finally fell asleep, he dreamed about the tiger, only it wasn’t in a cage. It was free and running through the woods, and there was something on its back, but Rob couldn’t tell what it was. As the tiger got closer and closer, Rob saw that the thing was Sistine in her pink party dress. She was riding the tiger. In his dream, Rob waved to her and she waved back at him. But she didn’t stop. She and the tiger kept going, past Rob, deeper and deeper into the woods.
Chapter 12 Quotes
It was still raining, but not hard. He looked at the falling Kentucky Star. He thought for a minute about one of the not-wishes he had buried deepest: a friend. He stared at the star and felt the hope and need and fear course through him in a hot neon arc. He shook his head.
“Naw,” he said to the Kentucky Star. “Naw.”
Chapter 14 Quotes
“It’s just like the poem says,” Sistine breathed.
“What?” said Rob.
“That poem. The one that goes, ‘Tiger, tiger, burning bright, in the forests of the night.’ That poem. It’s just like that. He burns bright.”
“Oh,” said Rob. He nodded. He liked the fierce and beautiful way the words sounded. Just as he was getting ready to ask Sistine to say them again, she whirled around and faced him.
“What’s he doing way out here?” she demanded.
Rob shrugged. “I don’t know,” he said. “He’s Beauchamp’s, I guess.”
“Beauchamp’s what?” said Sistine. “His pet?”
“I don’t know,” said Rob. “I just like looking at him. Maybe Beauchamp does, too. Maybe he just likes to come out here and look at him.”
“That’s selfish,” said Sistine.
Rob shrugged.
“This isn’t right, for this tiger to be in a cage. It’s not right.”
Then Rob remembered the name of the feeling that was pushing up inside him, filling him full to overflowing. It was happiness. That was what it was called.
Chapter 17 Quotes
“What happened to [Cricket]?” Rob asked.
Willie May bent and took a pillowcase out of the dryer.
“Let him go,” she said.
“You let him go?” Rob repeated, his heart sinking inside him like a stone.
“Couldn’t stand seeing him locked up, so I let him go.” She folded the pillowcase carefully.
“And then what happened?”
“I got beat by my daddy. He said I didn’t do that bird no favor. Said all I did was give some snake its supper.”
Chapter 21 Quotes
Willie May lit another cigarette and laughed. “Ain’t that just like God,” she said, “throwing the two of you together?” She shook her head. “This boy full of sorrow, keeping it down low in his legs. And you,”—she pointed her cigarette at Sistine—“you all full of anger, got it snapping out of you like lightning. You some pair, that’s the truth.”
Chapter 24 Quotes
And Rob realized then why he liked Sistine so much. He liked her because when she saw something beautiful, the sound of her voice changed. All the words she uttered had an oof sound to them, as if she was getting punched in the stomach. The sound was in her voice when she talked about the Sistine Chapel and when she looked at the things he carved in wood. It was there when she said the poem about the tiger burning bright, and it was there when she talked about Willie May being a prophetess. Her words sounded the way all those things made him feel, as if the world, the real world, had been punched through, so that he could see something wonderful and dazzling on the other side of it.
Chapter 25 Quotes
“You’re not talking like a prophetess.”
“That’s ’cause I ain’t no prophetess,” said Willie May. All I am is somebody speaking the truth. And the truth is: there ain’t nothing you can do for this tiger except to let it be.”
“It’s not right,” said Sistine.
“Right ain’t got nothing to do with it,” muttered Willie May. “Sometimes right don’t count.”
As they walked back to the Kentucky Star, Rob thought about what Willie May had said about the tiger rising on up. It reminded him of what she had said about his sadness needing to rise up. And when he thought about the two things together, the tiger and his sadness, the truth circled over and above him and then came and landed lightly on his shoulder. He knew what he had to do.
Chapter 28 Quotes
“Oh,” said Sistine, in that voice that Rob loved. “See,” she said, “that was the right thing. That was the right thing to do.”
Rob nodded. But in his mind, he saw a flash of green. He remembered what happened to Cricket.
Chapter 29 Quotes
The whole way back to the Kentucky Star, Rob held on to Sistine’s hand. He marveled at what a small hand it was and how much comfort there was in holding on to it.
And he marveled, too, at how different he felt inside, how much lighter, as he had set something heavy down and walked away from it, without bothering to look back.
Chapter 30 Quotes
“And on Monday,” his father continued, “I aim to call that principal and tell him you’re going back to school. I ain’t messing around with taking you to more doctors. You’re going back and that’s that.”
“Yes, sir,” said Rob. He didn’t mind the thought of going back to school. School was where Sistine would be.
His father cleared his throat. “It’s hard for me to talk about your mama. I wouldn’t never have believed that I could miss somebody the way I miss her. Saying her name pains me.” He bent his head and concentrated on putting the cap on the tube of medicine. “But I’ll say it for you,” he said. “I’ll try on account of you.”
Rob looked at his father’s hands. They were the hands that had held the gun that shot the tiger. They were the hands that put the medicine on his legs. They were the hands that had held him when he cried. They were complicated hands, Rob thought.



