old fisherman who is unlucky in the past 84 days. Manolin, his young devoted apprentice and friend, was forced to leave the boat by his parents because Santiago hadn’t caught anything for so long. So on the 85th day Santiago decides to go much farther than he has ever gone before, and in doing that he catches an 18-foot marlin, and that is when the adventure begins. In this book Santiago demonstrates the best and the worst in a person through his actions in struggle, defeat, and death, endurance under pain, and pride. In this story Santiago demonstrates his actions under struggle, defeat, and death well when he catches the marlin of a lifetime. When Santiago sets sail for farther out than he has ever been before he didn’t realize how big of a marlin he had gotten, he hooked him perfectly but then he started to pull the boat. And for three days the marlin pulled the boat, and for three days Santiago hung in there and didn’t let go until he had finished. It was so hard for him to stay there while the fish just keep pulling he struggled to stay alert when the fish would suddenly pull forward. And he struggled while he had no cooked food for himself aboard the skiff, he had to eat raw fish that he caught to stay alive. Santiago almost gave up, he thought that the fish was about to defeat him but then the fish jumped and gave him the chance to pull in the rope and let the marlin fill his are sacks. Then he started to swim in circles and finally he speared the fish right through the heart. These are some examples of how Santiago acted when under struggle, defeat, and death.