47 pages 1 hour read

Stephan Pastis

Mistakes Were Made

Fiction | Graphic Novel/Book | Middle Grade | Published in 2013

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Symbols & Motifs

Childhood Imagination

The motif of childhood imagination is central to Timmy Failure. The story is told almost entirely from Timmy’s perspective, and since Timmy has such a powerful imagination, his narrative makes no distinction between what is real and what he imagines. He speaks about his polar bear like he is really there: “We have no time to waste. Total will smash in the door. Rise on his hind legs. And roar with an Arctic fury that makes seals weep” (186). He runs a detective agency and expects to be making hundreds of thousands of dollars by the end of the year, as long as word of mouth manages to spread. Timmy talks about everything as though it is really happening, and it doesn’t become clear where the line between imagination and reality is until the consequences start to arise.

Often, Timmy uses his imagination to escape the problems in his everyday life. He avoids the reality that he and his mom are moving to a smaller apartment because they have money problems, instead choosing to imagine that the new apartment is going to be massive and have room for a huge office space.