9th Blog Post
There is a large portion of conflict between adults and children in The Ocean at the End of the Lane due to the fact that adults and children, especially the unnamed boy narrator, seem to exist in different worlds. While the narrator is very aware of magic and the sinister forces at work, the adults seem oblivious to the bad things happening around them. There is also apparently no way to get through to them when they are under the spell of Ursula Monkton, leaving our narrator alone without any adult support except from the Hempstocks. The adults are also used as a barrier in the story to keep the narrator from reaching his goals, like Ursula intercepting him when he tries to escape or his father actually trying to drown him as punishment for disrespecting Ursula. Adults are of no help to the boy and he instead has to navigate around them during his adventure. The conflict is never truly resolved since the narrator's story ends while he is still young and his adult self reflecting back seems to be unable to understand that it happened.
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