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In the novel , East of Eden by John Steinbeck, Catherine Ames is
one of the main characters. She is introduced to the reader as a monster
and as time goes on , she possesses both monster like and animal
qualities. As Catherine sher gets older and wiser , she gets more evil and
displays her monster and animals like characteristics. She knows she is
powerful and indestructible. She has manipulated and tricked many
people her life causing them to go to the extreme death. Catherine
"Cathy" shows her evilness and her moster like behavior in many scene
throughout the book. Steinbeck illustrates Cathy as being a monster , "I
believed there are monsters born in the world It is my belief that Cathy
Ames was born with the tendencies, or lack of them, which drove and
forced her all of her. Cathy was born with an innocent look that fooled
many; she had golden blond hair, hazel eyes, a thin and dedicated nose ,
and a small chin to make her face look heart shaped. According to the
town Cathy lived, Cathy had a scent of sweetness, but that is just what
Cathy wanted the town to see and think when Cathy planned her kill;
"The fire broke out the Ames house went up like a rocket Enough
remained of Mr. and Mrs. Ames to make sure there were two bodies ."
Cathy had set the house on fire and broke into the safe to steal the
family's money. As the investigators scooped the place, they noticed that
the bolts stuck out and there were on keys left in the locks. They knew it
was not an accident. Cathy's body was never found, but the town
assumed that she died. "If it had not been for Cathy's murder, the fire and
robbery might have been a coincidence. " Steinbeck, again, portrays the
reader that Cathy is a monster. "when I said Cathy was a monster it
seemed to me that it was so." Steinbeck is reassuring the reader that
Cathy is a monster and with the evidence before and after this statement.
For example, Cathy later changes her name to Kate entrains a
whorehouse. While she runs the house, she takes pictures of all the
important male individuals in the town to later send to their spouses and
families. Cathy plans to send the pictures whether they caused trouble or