Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Character Analysis for "Stone
Cold"
- Link
- Presented as ordinary young man with ordinary background
- shows that anyone could fall victim to homelessness and dispel some of the myths/prejudices about
homelessness and what is to blame.
- Link’s journey to homelessness is not extraordinary and is presented in a matter-of-fact way (he
seems very honest and doesn’t actively seek sympathy).
- Home life is bad
- Dad ran away with receptionist when he was 14 – out of his control,
- mucked up school work for a while but still secured some qualifications (5 GCSEs = miracle due to
home situation)
- Mother’s new partner, Vince, likes his drink, makes him feel uncomfortable, arguments, causes sister,
Carol, to move out
- faces difficulties as there is no Government money for school leavers and no training places.
- Vicious circle: jobs want experience but can’t get experience; goes to interviews but looks scruffy as
living on street.
- Shelter
- stark contrast to
Link
- cruel and calculating nature
- represents an ever present threat to the homeless and exploits their vulnerabilities
- aim to rid the streets of what he considers to be
vermin.
- His extreme views and actions are used by Swindells to emphasise people’s prejudiced attitudes and
at the same time show how vulnerable the homeless are.
- name is ironic as is suggests protection and comfort which is the opposite of what he provides.
- reflects his exploitative nature and how he uses the weaknesses and vulnerabilities of the homeless
against them
- cruel and callous nature as he gets pleasure and amusement out of others’ suffering.
- He also sees the murders as performing a much needed service and putting the homeless out of
their misery.
- Shelter’s was a sergeant-major in the army but he was discharged on medical grounds
- He views this as part of a ‘plot’ and is determined to rid the country of the ‘garbage
- efficient killer and he is very calculating in how he goes about planning out his crimes. He buys a cat and clothes
to make him seem approachable and kindly.
- In reality he despises cats and Swindells uses the details within his narrative to show how
appearances can be deceiving (just as people wouldn’t guess that Shelter is a serial killer, Swindells is
suggesting we don’t know anything about the individuals who live on the streets).
- commits the murders by using the vulnerabilities of the homeless against them: he offers shelter,
food, money and, with Ginger, he uses his friendship with Link against him
- Ginger
- provides companionship for Link, which is something most homeless people don’t have
- still maintain some distance by using nicknames and not always telling each other where they are
going
- showing that it is very difficult to fully trust/rely on someone in this situation (again creating
sympathy)
- Ginger teaches Link essential skills for surviving on the streets: how and where to beg, not being
open about the money/possessions you have, where to go for food/shelter
- Swindells uses this to show how difficult things are and also to show how invaluable Ginger is and how
lucky Link is to have found him.
- Link gets jealous of Ginger’s other friends and feels distanced from them – this shows his immaturity and total
reliance on Ginge
- When Ginger goes missing, Swindells intensifies Link’s isolation and vulnerability as he questions his trust
in Ginger and makes him seem even more exposed.
- Gail
- comes into the narrative immediately after Ginger’s disappearance
- Although Link tells himself he will never get this close to again, he immediately befriends Gail
- takes on the role of passing on his knowledge of the streets to her
- This shows the strong desire for companionship and how lonely and difficult living on the streets is
- Gail behaves in a secretive manner at times and Link again gets jealous
- the reader is also kept in the dark as to Gail’s true motives so we share Link’s perspective and see
how difficult it is to trust someone.
- At the end, when we discover Gail is really a reporter, we are again shown how vulnerable the
homeless are to exploitation.
- Gail uses Link’s need for companionship to get a story about the homeless without really considering
him as an individual and his difficulties