"Growth" is a very broad term used without a truly consistent definition. Basically, it explains and covers future themes when people move from children to adults and loses innocence. In many ways, people see this change as a specific moment in a person's life, such as the 18th birthday, or the day a person leaves their parents' house. In many novels, such a thought about the key moment of life is drawn, which provides a door open to adults.
The title of Cormac McCarthy's novel, All the Pretty Horses, reflects the importance and diversity of the person Ma plays in this adult's story. This is because John Grady Cole is related to the focus of the novel. This horse was the social foundation of Western American culture of the time and was described as boys' economic and practical assets - John Grady and Lacy Rollins -. However, the author uses an idyllic and passionate vocabulary to describe the abstract nature of a horse and draws it as a very spiritual animal just like a human. John Grady is closely related to all horses and knows the horse world well.
Horses provide links between all beautiful horses. Don Hector and John spent hours speaking about the characteristics of various horses and reading books on horses. After the conversation, Don Hectors chose John to take care of the horse. The horse of this novel also irreversibly bundled three boys. Even after Blevins was shot by the captain of the police, John kept looking for the legendary owner of the big bay horse of Blevins. The way boys, especially John, treats horses in pastures is the reason they are respected in Vacation in the meadow. Horses associate cowboys with age, young and old, Mexican and Americans