Set in 1965 Tulsa, Oklahoma,
the Greasers are a gang of tough, low-income working-class teens. They include
Ponyboy Curtis and his two older brothers, Sodapop and Darrel , as well as
Johnny Cade , Dallas Winston , Two-Bit Matthews , and Steve Randle . Their
rivalry is with the Socs , a gang of wealthier kids. Five of the Socs jump
Ponyboy and cut his neck with a switchblade;
Johnny had been similarly attacked the month before. Two Socs, Bob Sheldon and
Randy Adderson , confront Johnny, Ponyboy, and Two-Bit, who are talking to the Socs'
girlfriends, Cherry and Marcia , at a
drive-in theater. The girls defuse the situation by going home with the Socs. Later
that night, Ponyboy and Johnny are attacked in a park by Bob, Randy, and two
other Socs. They begin dunking Ponyboy in a fountain, but Johnny pulls out his
switchblade and stabs Bob, killing him.
On
the advice of Dallas ,
Ponyboy and Johnny leave town, and hide out in an abandoned church in
Windrixville. Ponyboy dyes his hair blonde with peroxide in case anybody spots
him. He reads Gone with the
Wind and quotes the Robert Frost poem "Nothing Gold
Can Stay". Dallas arrives with news that Cherry has
offered to support the boys in court. They go out for food, then return to find
the church on fire with children trapped inside. Johnny is hospitalized with
severe burns and a broken back after he, Ponyboy, and Dallas rescue the
children. The boys are praised for their heroism, but Johnny is charged with manslaughter for killing Bob, while Ponyboy may be sent to a boys' home.
Bob's
death has sparked calls from the Socs for "a rumble," which the
Greasers win. Dally then drives Ponyboy to the hospital to visit Johnny. Johnny
is unimpressed by the victory, and dies after telling Ponyboy to "stay
gold," referring to the Frost poem. Unable to bear Johnny's death, Dally
robs a grocery store at gunpoint and is killed by police. Ponyboy is eventually
cleared of wrongdoing in Bob's death and allowed to stay with his brothers. Turning
the pages of Johnny's copy of Gone
with the Wind, Ponyboy finds a letter from Johnny saying that saving the
children was worth sacrificing his own life. The story ends as it began, with
Ponyboy writing a school report about his experiences.
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