The Outsiders (novel): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Undid revision 243932904 by Daddysgirldom (talk)
Blanked the page
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox Book | <!-- See [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Novels]] or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Books]] -->
| name = The Outsiders
| title_orig =
| image = [[Image:Outsiders(book)cover.jpeg|200px]] <!-- prefer 1st edition cover -->
| image_caption = ''The Outsiders'' (front cover of 1997 Puffin Books paperback reprint edition)
| author = [[S. E. Hinton]] <br />Susan Eloise Hinton
| illustrator = dodfoedofod| cover_artist =
| country = [[United States]]
| language = [[English language|English]]
| series =
| genre = [[Young-adult fiction|Young adult novel]]
| publisher = [[Dell Publishing]]
| release_date = [[1967 in literature|1967]]
| media_type = Print ([[Hardcover]] & [[Paperback]])
| pages = 156 pp
| isbn = ISBN 0-670-53257-6 (hardcover edition)
| followed_by = [[That Was Then, This Is Now]]

}}
'''''The Outsiders''''' is a novel by [[S.E. Hinton]], first published in [[1967 in literature|1967]] by [[Viking Press]]. Hinton was 15 when she began writing the novel<ref>{{cite book |last= Hinton|first= S. E.|authorlink= S. E. Hinton|title= The Outsiders|origyear= 1967|year= 2003|publisher= Speak/Penguin Putnam|isbn= 0-14-038572-X |chapter=speaking with S. E. Hinton... |page=p. 182}}</ref> aasioasdonvwasgiovaensdoirnnd 18 when it was published. ''The Outsiders'' is the lifestory of fourteen-year-old [[Ponyboy Curtis]]. Hinton explores a multitude of themes throughout the story, such as [[friendship]], and [[coming of age]].They are seen by following two rival groups, the [[greaser (subculture)|greasers]] and the [[Preppy|Socs]] (pronounced "soashes" by the author, short for ''Socials''), who are separated by status.

''The Outsiders'' is ranked 43rd on the [[American Library Association]]'s top 100 Most [[List of most commonly challenged books in the U.S.|Frequently Challenged Books]] of 1990-2000<ref>"[http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/bannedbooksweek/bbwlinks/100mostfrequently.htm The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990–2000]", [[American Library Association]]. Retrieved [[September 28|09-28]]-[[2006]].</ref> and 38th on their 1990-1999 list.<ref>"[http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/bannedbooksweek/bbwlinks/top100challenged.htm The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990-1999]", [[American Library Association]]. Retrieved [[March 27|03-27]]-[[2007]].</ref> The book was challenged in [[South Milwaukee, Wisconsin|South Milwaukee]] because of its portrayal of violence, language, drug and alcohol abuse, and the fact that "virtually all the characters were from broken homes."{{Fact|date=May 2007}}.

==Plot summary==
The main characters in ''The Outsiders'' are Ponyboy Curtis, Johnny Cade, Dallas "Dally" or "Dallulon" Winston, Darrel "Darry" Curtis, Sodapop Curtis (Soda for short), Keith "Two-Bit" Mathews, and Steve Randle, a [[gang]] of [[greaser (subculture)|greasers]] in [[Tulsa, Oklahoma]]. The story is narrated by Ponyboy, younger brother of both Sodapop and Darry. The three boys are orphaned after a car accident kills their parents. Darry, at age 20, assumes the parental role to keep his brothers from getting sent to different homes. Darry feels overly burdened and cannot provide all of the things they need, often taking his frustrations out on Ponyboy. Although he is smart, he didn't pursue college so he could get a job and support Sodapop and Ponyboy. Sodapop dropped out of high school in favor of employment at a gas station to help his older brother. Sodapop also takes over the [[maternal]] role for Ponyboy, comforting him and encouraging him.

The greasers, who are generally poverty-stricken, derive their nickname from the grease, or hair oil, they use to slick back their hair. The Socs are the products of privileged upbringing. Although "the outsiders" may seem to refer to the alienated greasers, both groups are set back by economic and/or social limits. Each regard the other group as "outsiders".
The story begins with Ponyboy, the narrator and main character, leaving a movie. On his way, a red [[Chevrolet Corvair|Corvair]] begins trailing him with a group of Socs in it. After a bit of trailing, the Corvair stops and a group of Socs climb out. When they attack Ponyboy, he starts yelling for anyone in the gang. Moments later, the whole gang shows up, and the Socs leave. Later, Dally says he is going to go to a drive-in movie the next night to hunt some action and Ponyboy and Johnny agree to go with him. Two-Bit tells them that he will meet them later if he is not drunk.

At the open drive-in theater, Dally starts flirting with two Soc girls, Sherri "Cherry" Valance and her friend Marcia, the former of which loses patience with Dally and his antics. After Cherry throws a [[Coca-Cola|Coke]] in his face and Johnny tells him to leave her alone, Dally angrily leaves. Later, Two-Bit comes along and flirts with Marcia. Cherry starts to explain to Ponyboy that not all Socs are bad, and that they have troubles too, and lead a "hollow existence." Later, while Ponyboy and Johnny are walking Cherry and Marcia home after the show, their boyfriends, Bob Sheldon and Randy Adderson, catch up to them, in their blue Mustang. Bob and Randy, who have been drinking, are angry that the greaser boys are accompanying the girls and Two Bit challenges them to a fight, Cherry stops them and the socs and the girls leave the greasers alone.

Johnny is reluctant to go home so he and Ponyboy go look at the stars in a vacant lot. The boys fall asleep, which results in Ponyboy coming home later than he had intended. Darry is worried and angry with Ponyboy and slaps him after a heated exchange with him and Sodapop. Ponyboy runs out of the house back to the vacant lot despite Darry's plea for him to come back. With all the anger, Ponyboy runs off to the lot and finds Johnny, and the two of them walk to the park to cool off.

While Ponyboy and Johnny are at the park, Bob, Randy, and their friends drive by in the familiar blue Mustang. Drunk and dangerous, they begin to fight with the two greasers, but Ponyboy stands up to them. The Socs, determined to put the greasers in their place, scare Johnny, who recognizes Bob as the Soc who brutally beat him up some months before the start of the novel, an event that caused deep emotional scarring to Johnny. When Bob and Randy try to drown Ponyboy in a nearby fountain, Johnny, takes out his switchblade and stabs Bob to death. Randy and the other Socs run away in fright. The two boys seek help from Dally, who gives them a loaded gun , money, and directions to an abandoned church in Windrixville, where they hide out. Dally tells them that he will go fetch them when everything has blown over. Ponyboy and Johnny hop aboard a freight train and eventually reach the church after a long journey.

At the church, Ponyboy and Johnny cut off their long greasy hair to be less recognizable, and Johnny bleaches Ponyboy's hair with Peroxide. During this time, the boys bond even more, and discover they both have a love for the beautiful things in life that are often not obvious, such as sunsets, while going through the daily struggles of living on the "wrong" side of town. To pass the time, they smoke cigarettes and play poker. Ponyboy also reads to Johnny from a paperback copy of "[[Gone with the Wind]]". While they watch a sunrise, Ponyboy shares the [[Robert Frost]] poem ''[[Nothing Gold Can Stay (poem)|Nothing Gold Can Stay]]'' with Johnny, confessing he never quite understood what the poem meant.

Dally comes to get Ponyboy and Johnny from the church a week later. He brings them to a nearby Dairy Queen to get some hot food. While there, he tells the boys that Cherry is a spy for the gang. After hearing this, Johnny tells Dally that he and Ponyboy should go home and turn themselves in. Dally is angry, feeling the boys had gone to a lot of trouble for nothing. He still agrees to take the boys home and tells Johnny that he doesn't want to see Johnny get hardened in jail the way he did.

On the way back home, the boys see that the old church is on fire. When they hear the screams of children trapped inside, Ponyboy and Johnny both run in to rescue them. Ponyboy and Johnny get all the children out safely, and Ponyboy is able to escape the fire, but Johnny is pinned by a burning roof beam that had fallen on his back. After knocking Ponyboy to the ground in an effort to put out the flames on the smaller boy's jacket, Dally hurries into the inferno to save Johnny.

The three are taken to the hospital in town. Dally has been burned on one arm and Ponyboy is bruised, but otherwise unhurt. Johnny, however, is in critical condition; his back had been broken by the falling timber and he was in severe shock and suffering from second-degree and third-degree burns. Ponyboy reunites with his brothers, finally realizing that Darry's seeming harshness with him is only because Darry loves him and is afraid of losing him.

Bob's death at Johnny's hand is the reason for the Socs to challenge the greasers to a "rumble," or gang fight. On the day of the rumble, while Ponyboy and Two-Bit are walking around town, the former is confronted by Bob's friend Randy. Randy reveals that he does not want to and will not take part in the rumble, because nothing good would come of it. He has grown sick of the fighting, to the point that he is ready to leave town, but before he did, he wanted to tell someone who would understand. Randy and Ponyboy part, each with a new perspective of each other.

Two-Bit and Ponyboy go to see Johnny and Dally in the hospital. At first, the nurses will not let them see Johnny, but then a doctor says that he had been asking for them. Johnny asks them to get him another copy of ''Gone with the Wind.'' When Two-Bit runs to the drugstore for the book, Johnny breaks down to Ponyboy that he does want to die, because he saved the kids lives and think it is worth dying. Johnny passes out cold and the nurse asks Ponyboy to leave just as Two-Bit returns. They go to see Dally, who is yelling at his nurse. Dally admits that he was scared he might have accidentally killed Ponyboy back at the church when he tried to put out the fire on Ponyboy's back, and that he is also very upset about having to be in the hospital during the rumble. Before they leave, Dally asks Two-Bit for his prized switchblade, which Two-Bit relinquishes.

Dally breaks out of the hospital (using Two-Bit's switchblade) to fight in the rumble. The greasers, and two fellow gangs, Tim Shepard's gang and the Brumly boys, all team up to fight the Socs, evening the odds. Darry steps up first for the greasers, and his challenge is met by a Soc named Paul Holden, Darry's former high school friend. With that, the rumble begins. During the rumble, Ponyboy suffered from a kick to the head that will later affect him. Though outnumbered, the greasers are the eventual victors. Immediately after, Dally grabs Ponyboy and they rush to the hospital. The doctor on duty refuses to let them pass, saying that Johnny is dying, but eventually gives in. Dally tells Johnny about winning the rumble and that he is proud of him. Ponyboy leans over to Johnny, faintly Johnny tells him to "stay gold," and then dies. Completely devastated, Dally runs from the room, crying for the first time in years.

Ponyboy, dazed, confused, and woozy from his head injury, returns home to tell the rest of the gang that Johnny has died. The gang is shocked, despite knowing that Johnny's condition was grave, and saddened. Ponyboy tells Darry that he is scared for Dally and what he might do next. Validating Ponyboy's fears, Dally calls from a pay phone a few minutes later. He has robbed a grocery store and is on the run from the police. The gang races to meet Dally at the vacant lot, where he is surrounded by police. Dally then pulls out an unloaded gun and aims it at the police officers to instigate them into firing at him, thereby committing "[[suicide by cop]]." Ponyboy wonders for a split second why Dally stood up to the police, but then realizes that Dally had actually wanted to die; having lost the only thing (Johnny) that he truly cared for, he had lost the will to live. Overwhelmed by the situation at hand, injuries sustained in the rumble, and general sickness, Ponyboy passes out.

Ponyboy wakes up a few days later, his mind foggy. As he becomes more lucid, he enters a state of denial, telling himself that it was he that killed Bob, not Johnny. Darry makes Ponyboy stay in bed for at least a week until he recovers fully. During this time, Ponyboy has several visitors, one of whom is Randy. Randy does not blame Ponyboy for Bob's death, but when Randy mentions that Johnny was the one who killed Bob, Ponyboy deliriously insists that he himself was the killer. Meanwhile, a court trial scheduled to decide if the Curtis brothers will be allowed to stay together determines that Darry is a fit guardian, and the boys are allowed to stay together. At the same trial, the matter of Bob's death was settled as self-defense, clearing Johnny of charges.

Ponyboy, greatly affected by the recent events and his head injury, finds his grades slipping and fights with Darry again. To pass his English class, Mr. Syme, his English teacher, "taking in consideration the circumstances," gives him a special assignment to write an autobiographical composition. Darry and Ponyboy have another argument, this time regarding Ponyboy's composition. Sodapop suddenly shouts at his brothers to stop fighting and runs out the door. Darry and Ponyboy discover a letter that Sodapop's girlfriend, Sandy, had returned unopened, breaking up with him and they put aside their argument to chase after Sodapop together. Ponyboy and Darry catch up to Sodapop. Sodapop cries and tells his brothers that he feels scared and helpless, forced between the two, when they fight, so Ponyboy and Darry swore not to fight again for their brother's sake.

While flipping through the copy of ''Gone With the Wind'' Two-Bit had bought for Johnny, Ponyboy finds a letter Johnny wrote to him, explaining that "Nothing Gold Can Stay" in the Frost poem meant to always appreciate the things one finds wondrous when one is young. "Staying gold" is the way to be ("Stay gold, Ponyboy. Stay gold..."), and Johnny urges Ponyboy to tell Dally this. It is, of course, too late to tell Dally, and Ponyboy thinks about other kids in the world that are in similar situations. He thinks about Johnny, Dally, Bob, and all the others who would die young; who would stay hoodlums forever. Inspired, Ponyboy calls his English teacher and is told that his composition can be as long as he wants it to be, so he starts writing it, beginning by recounting the events of the day that changed his life forever, and it is revealed that his composition is the novel itself, with the same starting sentence: "When I stepped out into the bright sunlight from the darkness of the movie house, I had only two things on my mind: Paul Newman and a ride home."

==Characters==
===The Socs===
The Socs are a group of street gangs composed of spoiled kids from well-to-do rich families. They have no reservations about "jumping" Greasers without provocation. They listen to [[the Beatles]] and wear madras shirts. The boys drive [[Ford Mustang]]s and [[Corvair]]s and the girls drive [[Chevrolet Corvette|Corvette]]s.

Main characters who are Socs include:
* '''Robert "Bob" Sheldon''': Cherry's boyfriend, who was revealed to have jumped and mentally affected Johnny before the events in the book. According to Randy, though Bob was spoiled by his parents, he really just wanted them to say no to him every once in a while and set limits for him, instead of accepting the blame as bad parents and buying him off. The same night Bob (while drunk) and his friends corner Johnny and Ponyboy at the park and try to kill them for talking to Cherry and Marcia. Johnny stabs and kills Bob in self defense as fighting back . His friendship with Randy Adderson is described by Ponyboy as being similar to that of Sodapop and Steve, with Randy being like Sodapop and Bob being like Steve. He is described as being handsome and (according to Sherri) stands out from the crowd. Played by [[Leif Garrett]] in the film adaptation.
*'''Sherri "Cherry" Valance''': Bob's girlfriend, whose nickname comes from her fiery red hair. She sympathizes with the Greasers and becomes Ponyboy's friend. She admits to Ponyboy that she could fall in love with Dally Winston and hoped to never see him again because of it. Though Cherry is appreciative of Johnny telling Dally to leave her alone at the drive-in, she refuses to go visit Johnny at the hospital because he killed Bob. She also admits to Ponyboy that she watches sunsets from the east side. Played by [[Diane Lane]] in film adaptation.
* '''Randy Adderson''': Bob's friend, who is tired of the fighting between the Greasers and the Socs. He is the only person shown to voluntarily not participate in the rumble. When he meets Ponyboy at the [[Tasty Freez]], he tells Ponyboy that he is impressed with the younger boy's heroics and admits that he himself would have been too scared to do the same, though Ponyboy disagrees. Played by [[Darren Dalton]] in the movie.
* '''Marcia''': Friend of Cherry's who accompanies her during the night at the drive-in. She has short black hair, and appears to get along with Two-Bit, which is also a reason why her boyfriend, Randy, wants to get back on the Greasers for. Played by [[Michelle Meyrink]] in the movie.

===The Greasers===

-While the Socs live carefree lives of privilege, the Greasers all come from hard-knock backgrounds. They like to listen to the music of [[Elvis Presley]]
and think the [[The Beatles]] are "out". Their attire usually consists of tight fitting t-shirts, leather jackets, and snug jeans. Many Greasers are involved in criminal activities, which causes many people to incorrectly assume that all Greasers are juvenile delinquents (JDs). Many of the Greasers also have many family problems at home.

*'''Ponyboy Michael Curtis''', 14: The youngest of the Curtis brothers and protagonist of the novel, he is a daydreamer, painter, a bit of a bookworm, and a self proclaimed [[Pepsi]] addict. Ponyboy watches the sunsets from his backyard and often wonders what life would be like if there were no Greasers or Socs; no labels, just people being real. At the beginning of the novel, he thinks that only Greasers have problems, but comes to realize that the Socs often have similar problems, that some of them are as tired of fighting as he is, and that they too want to live in an environment where no one looks over their shoulder for fear of being "jumped." A heavy smoker, Ponyboy is also a star on his school's track team and is best friends with Johnny Cade. He analyzes many things deeply. Ponyboy is particularly attached to his hair and was upset when Johnny told him that he had to cut and bleach it when they were on the run. He often thinks the blond hair makes him look stupid and wimpy. He has a very close relationship with his second-oldest brother, Sodapop, who he feels is the only other person, besides Johnny, that he can confide in. His parents died in a car crash, leaving his oldest brother, Darry, to take care of the two of them. Ponyboy feels that Darry is too hard on him and does not love him, but later realizes that Darry is firm with him because he loves both his brothers very much and wants them to have the opportunities that he himself did not have. Ponyboy is often considered, though not clearly stated, the baby, the "kid". Played by [[C. Thomas Howell]] in film adaptation.

*'''Johnny Cade (Johnnycake)''', 16: "If you can picture a little dark puppy that has been kicked too many times and is lost in a crowd of strangers, you'll have Johnny," says Ponyboy. Johnny is a small and timid boy. His shy and nervous nature stems from years of abuse from his parents and from a recent jumping from a Soc, who is later revealed to be Bob Sheldon. Johnny's face bears scars from the beating from Bob, who was wearing several large rings at the time. Ever since then, Johnny never walks alone, and carries a six-inch switchblade in his back pocket. Ponyboy quotes that if Johnny was ever jumped again, he would kill the person that did it to him. He looks up to Dally Winston and is prone to instability and emotional oversensitivity. Although he never finished school, Johnny is very good at analyzing things that many other people do not understand. Johnny is the "gang's pet, everyone's kid brother," and relies on the Greasers for the love and affection he does not get at home. He also does his share with the gang, however. He would do anything to protect Ponyboy, and this is shown while up in Windrixville. Also, he risks his life to save little children, claiming that they have more to live for. He does not have much self-confidence, but in the end, he realizes that he never wanted to die, and sixteen years was too young for anyone. In the film adaptation the part of Johnny is played by [[Ralph Macchio]].

*'''Dallas "Dally" Winston''', 17: The tough guy of the group, Dally is considered extremely dangerous. He grew up on the streets of New York and was arrested at the age of 10. Although he is not muscular, many people wouldn't fight him. Dally is the opposite of Johnny; he is prone to react rashly and violently, even to his friends, and avoids showing emotion as much as possible. He does, however, have a [[wikt:soft spot|soft spot]] for Johnny, and is very protective of the younger boy. Ponyboy on Dally: "He had an elfish face, with high cheekbones and a pointed chin, small, sharp animal teeth, and ears like a lynx. His hair was almost white, it was so blond, and he didn't like haircuts, or hair oil either, so it fell over his forehead in wisps and kicked out the back in tufts and curled behind his ears and along the nape of his neck. His eyes were blue, blazing ice, cold with a hatred of the world." Dally has a record with the police 'a mile long'. He is killed by police, rather sets himself up for suicide, after the death of Johnny Cade, the only person he ever really cared about. In the film adaptation the part of Dally is played by [[Matt Dillon]].

*'''Sodapop Patrick Curtis''', 16: The middle Curtis brother, who dropped out in High School and works at a [[Sunoco|DX]] Gas Station. He is described as extremely good looking; they describe him by saying he has "Movie-Star good looks", and is an undefeated fighter, though he is not the runner his brothers are. Sodapop is very carefree, preferring to play around rather than do any work. He isolates himself and smokes only when he is upset; otherwise, he is social and hyperactive. Although he is generally very optimistic, when reality hits him, he descends into an extremely deep funk. Sodapop confides in Ponyboy and sticks up for him when Darry lectures him. He is the only person who can tease Darry and get away with it. Towards the end of the novel, Soda is greatly upset when he learns the hard way that Sandy, a girl he considered his one true love, has moved to Florida and rejected him. She moved to Florida because when she told her parents about Sodapop's plans to marry her they didn't want their daughter to marry so young,so they sent her off to live with her grandmother. "I guess she didn't love him, like he thought she did," Darry says to Ponyboy. In the film adaptation the part of Sodapop is played by [[Rob Lowe]].

*'''Darrel Shaynne "Darry" Curtis Jr.''', 20: The oldest of the Curtis boys, Darry is tall, broad-shouldered, and muscular. Darry is occasionally perceived as cold and uncaring, as a result of assuming the role of parental figure after the death of his parents, in order to keep the family together. Ponyboy had believed that Darry did not love him, yet later realizes otherwise when Darry cried for him, since Darry did not cry at the death of their parents. Because of his build, Darry is often referred to as "Superman" or "Muscles." However, Darry is quite intelligent, and he seems to at least slightly resent the hulking-strongman stereotype; Steve once calls him "all brawn and no brains," leading Darry to punch him hard in the jaw. He roofs houses for a living. He is Ponyboy's opposite; he is as logical as Ponyboy is imaginative. Darry is extremely concerned about Ponyboy's grades, though not upset about Sodapop dropping out of high school. Darry is very bitter about the fact that he never went to [[college]]. Even though he had been offered an athletic [[scholarship]], he turned down the opportunity in order to raise Sodapop and Ponyboy, thus keeping them out of an boys' home. Even though Darry is associated with the Greasers, he keeps his hair cut short. Ponyboy notes that Darry is very Soc-like and too "smart" to be a Greaser, and the only reason that Darry was not a Soc was because he would not turn his back on his brothers or the gang. In the film adaptation the part of Darry is played by [[Patrick Swayze]].

*'''Keith "Two-Bit" Mathews''', 18: He has been known as "Two-Bit" for so long that even his teachers have forgotten that his real name is Keith. Two-Bit is the joker of the gang, always smiling and cracking jokes. Like Sodapop, he lives for action and fun. Though nearly 19 years old, Two-Bit is still a junior in high school because he finds school "entertaining." Two-Bit is known as both a shoplifter and a ladies' man, though he is not perceived to be as good-looking as Sodapop. He loves fighting, his stolen black-handled [[switchblade]] (a [[Balisong (knife)|balisong]] in the film), blonds, and flirting. He flirts with Marcia, even though he knows that she is the girlfriend of a Soc. In the film adaptation the part of Two-Bit is played by [[Emilio Estevez]].

*'''Steve Randle''', 17: He has thick greasy hair that he combs back "in complicated swirls." Steve is tall, lean, cocky, and arrogant, though smart and skilled at driving. He and Ponyboy get along only because of Sodapop, and is a perfect example of a Greaser who suffers from child abuse, as his father forces him out of the house every week. Steve has been Sodapop's best friend since grade school; the two even work at the same gas station. Steve and Sodapop often bicker and get into wrestling and arm wrestling matches to vent their excessive energy. Sodapop is the only Curtis brother he really cares about; on one occasion, he called Darry "all brawn and no brains," which infuriated Darry so much that he punched Steve in the jaw and nearly shattered it. He considers Ponyboy a "tag-along" and does not like when Sodapop brings him along to places. In the film adaptation the part of Steve is played by [[Tom Cruise]].

*'''Tim Shepard''', 18: Though he is friends with the main characters, Tim leads a gang that bears his own name. The [[Shepard Family|Shepard]] gang had rumbled with the Curtises and their friends in the past and they join forces at the rumble against the Socs. Tim is described as having dark, curly hair and blue eyes. A tramp slashed him with a broken pop bottle, so he has a scar from his temple to his chin. He dishes out harsh discipline to his gang. His nose had been broken twice before and was broken a third time during the rumble. Tim and Dally are "two of a kind," says Ponyboy. He has a younger brother, Curly, who is mentioned in the book as being in the reformatory. The character of Tim Shepard (as well as Curly Shepard and Angela Shepard) appear in S.E. Hinton's second novel, ''[[That Was Then, This Is Now]]''. In the film adaptation the part of Tim is played by [[Glenn Withrow]].

==Film version==
{{main|The Outsiders (film)}}

A film adaption of the novel was made in 1983 by Francis Ford Coppola. The film is notable for being the breakout film for a number of actors who would go on to become major stars. In September 2005, Coppola re-released the film, including 22 minutes of additional footage, entitled ''The Outsiders: The Complete Novel'', reinserting scenes that were left out of the previous version, making this new version much closer to the book.

==Television series==
{{main|The Outsiders (TV series)}}

A 13-part television series based on the characters from the novel was aired in 1990 by [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]]. S.E. Hinton co-wrote the pilot episode with Alan Shapiro.

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
*{{imdb title|id=0086066|title=The Outsiders}}
*[http://www.sehinton.com S.E. Hinton website]
*[http://www.theoutsidersbookandmovie.com Fansite for the book and film]
*[http://www.cliffsnotes.com/WileyCDA/LitNote/id-139.html The CliffsNotes page on ''The Outsiders''.]
*[http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/outsiders/ The SparkNotes page on ''The Outsiders''.]
*[http://www.bookrags.com/notes/outs/ Bookrags notes summary page on ''The Outsiders''.]
*[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/23/books/review/Peck-t.html?ex=1348200000&en=144a55d40da8050c&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss "'The Outsiders': 40 Years Later"] by [[Dale Peck]], in ''[[The New York Times]]''

{{DEFAULTSORT:Outsiders, The}}
[[Category:1967 novels]]
[[Category:American novels]]
[[Category:Debut novels]]
[[Category:Young adult novels]]
[[Category:Novels by S. E. Hinton]]
[[Category:Motorcycling]]
[[Category:Youth culture]]

[[de:Die Outsider]]
[[ru:Изгои (роман)]]
[[fi:Me kolme ja jengi]]

Revision as of 21:58, 8 October 2008