logo

The Collector

John Fowles

The Collector

John Fowles

  • 55-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
  • Featured in our ClassClassSafety & Danger collections
  • The ultimate resource for assignments, engaging lessons, and lively book discussions

The Collector Chapter 2, Pages 103-166 Summary & Analysis

Chapter 2, Pages 103-135 Summary

Miranda begins keeping a secret diary a week after her kidnapping. Journaling provides some escape from her claustrophobic cell. In the first entry, she thinks of escape and laments that neither her parents nor her friends know her whereabouts. Above all, she tries to decipher Frederick’s motives—she doesn’t understand why he kidnapped her if his intent isn’t sexual. His polite, obsequious manner clashes with her expectation that, as a kidnapper, he would be callous and violent.

Frederick (who Miranda thinks is named Ferdinand) blushes whenever Miranda mentions sex or catches him in a lie. He dresses, speaks, and decorates like a working-class man pretending to be bourgeois. He is gangly, stiff, and looks perpetually aggrieved under his false humility. His eyes betray a hidden part of his psyche: “[H]is eyes are mad. Grey with a grey lost light in them” (105). Upon learning he’s an atheist, Miranda finds she wants to believe in God; she begins praying daily for deliverance.

Frederick changes Miranda. She notices that she’s always reacting against him: “He makes me change, he makes me want to dance round him, bewilder him, dazzle him, dumbfound him” (115). Imprisonment starves Miranda of human contact to the extent that she begins asking Frederick to stay with her after dinner.

blurred text

Unlock this
Study Guide!

Join SuperSummary to gain instant access to all 55 pages of this Study Guide and thousands of other learning resources.
Get Started
blurred text