In the book Absolutely Maybe, the main character, named after her mother’s favorite line of makeup, Maybelline, has a rough life. Her mother is into beauty pageants and even runs one of her own. Everyone looks at Maybe and expects her to be all girly and prissy, but she is the opposite. She has pink hair and her best friends are two “weird kids” named Ted and Hollywood (nickname). Her mother is a drunk, along with her stepdad whom she does not like. To make matters worse, one day, her stepfather tried to rape her. After the incident, she runs away to California with her two best friends, trying to find her birth father. During their stay in California, they went through many hardships. Some of these obstacles led the characters to use appeals to pathos (feelings), logos (logic), and ethos (credibility) throughout to book.
While the friends were in California, they got some stuff stolen including Maybe’s purse and money. She needed some new makeup because she looked rundown from all the troubles they went through but did not have any money to get it. She asked Ted for money, but he did not give her any because he needed to save up for better things. Maybe really wanted the makeup, so she slipped it into her pocket, not knowing that Ted was watching her. Since Ted cares about her, he told her to put the makeup down or he would call the police, no jokes aside. She saw how serious he was and put the makeup back. Ted believed that his threat helped her out of “a quick way to land in jail” (pg 73). Ted appealed to logos by telling Maybe to put the makeup down because it is known that when you get caught stealing, you can get in big trouble. She knew it was wrong but was too desperate to think of the consequences and Ted was there to help her make the right decision.
In the same instance, Maybe appealed to pathos. She really wanted the makeup and she begged him to let her take it without him telling on her. After all, he had even told her “you look funny.” Ted told her she was being dramatic and she got really upset. When he said she was being dramatic, she told him she had a reason after all that had recently happened to her from getting her purse and money stolen, to almost getting raped by her mom’s fiancé, to running away from home with no job or place to live (pg 73). She wanted him to know why she wanted to steal the makeup so bad and not be judge, so she used everything that happened to her to try to make him feel her pain and let her take the makeup. Sadly, her appeal to pathos did not work because Ted did not want her to end up getting in trouble for stealing the makeup.
At the end of the book, Maybe’s mom finally gets ahold of her and apologizes and asks her to come back home because she misses her. Maybe did not really want to go back home because of all the bad things that happened and the bad treatment she had been receiving while living there. Her mom however had shown great improvement. She had been taking AA classes to help her stop drinking and even broke it off with her fiancé. Maybe’s mom appealed to ethos by her actions and the things she told Maybe. It baffled Maybe that “[her] mother got on a plane to see [her] and she said she was sorry” (pg 249). This showed her that her mom actually cared. In the end, her mom decides to stay in California and they live together again, to start a whole new life.
The characters in this story appealed to pathos, logos, and ethos, making any argument they made stronger. This also made it easier for the reader to distinguish the emotions being expressed and how and why they were expressed. Ted appealed to logos by telling Maybe not to steal and the store, while Maybe appealed to pathos right after by trying to justify her stealing by giving her sob story. In the end, Maybe’s mom appeal to ethos by actually going to California, giving up drinking, and breaking up with her fiancé, to make things between her and Maybe better. This is a good, well-written book and I would recommend it to one of my friends.