Shiloh

by

Bobbie Ann Mason

Leroy Moffitt Character Analysis

Leroy Moffitt, the story’s protagonist, is a former long-haul trucker who is married to Norma Jean. At the beginning of the story, Leroy has just suffered a bad trucking accident, leaving him housebound. The dynamic at home is strained; he was on the road for over a decade, but Norma Jean doesn’t seem excited to have him back—even while he desperately wants to reconnect with her. As the story progresses, the source of the distance in their marriage becomes clear: 15 years ago, their infant son Randy died, and they grieved separately, with Leroy out on the road and Norma Jean home alone. They’ve become different people in that time, and they barely know one another now. Compounding Leroy’s anxiety over his failing marriage is his new sense of emasculation. He’s no longer the family’s breadwinner and he’s physically disabled, so he throws himself into crafting projects like needlepoint and smokes a lot of weed while spending his days home alone. But instead of speaking honestly with Norma Jean about what they’re feeling or what they’ve been through, Leroy never mentions the loss of their son. He instead becomes naively fixated on the notion that building a log cabin for them to live in will allow them to start fresh—despite Norma Jean’s insistence that she doesn’t want the log cabin and the obvious fact that building a house isn’t a substitute for grappling with their past. In the end, on a trip to Shiloh that Leroy hopes will rekindle their marriage, Norma Jean announces that she is leaving Leroy then walks away from their picnic lunch. The baffled Leroy finds himself emotionally and physically left behind.

Leroy Moffitt Quotes in Shiloh

The Shiloh quotes below are all either spoken by Leroy Moffitt or refer to Leroy Moffitt. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
).
Shiloh Quotes

Leroy Moffitt’s wife, Norma Jean, is working on her pectorals. She lifts three-pound dumbbells to warm up, then progresses to a twenty-pound barbell. Standing with her legs apart, she reminds Leroy of Wonder Woman.

“I’d give anything if I could just get these muscles to where they’re real hard,” says Norma Jean.

Related Characters: Norma Jean Moffitt (speaker), Leroy Moffitt
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

At first the kits were diversions, something to kill time, but now he is thinking about building a full-scale log house from a kit. It would be considerably cheaper than building a regular house, and besides, Leroy has grown to appreciate how things are put together. He has begun to realize that in all the years he was on the road he never took time to examine any­thing. He was always flying past scenery.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt
Related Symbols: The Log Cabin
Page Number: 4
Explanation and Analysis:

“They won’t let you build a log cabin in any of the new sub­divisions,” Norma Jean tells him.

“They will if I tell them it’s for you,” he says, teasing her. Ever since they were married, he has promised Norma Jean he would build her a new home one day. They have always rented, and the house they live in is small and nondescript. It does not even feel like a home, Leroy realizes now.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt (speaker), Norma Jean Moffitt (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Log Cabin
Page Number: 4
Explanation and Analysis:

Norma Jean is often startled to find Leroy at home, and he thinks she seems a little disappointed about it. Per­haps he reminds her too much of the early days of their marriage, before he went on the road. They had a child who died as an infant, years ago. They never speak about their memories of Randy, which have almost faded, but now that Leroy is home all the time, they sometimes feel awkward around each other, and Leroy wonders if one of them should mention the child. He has the feeling that they are waking up out of a dream together—that they must create a new marriage, start afresh.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Norma Jean Moffitt, Randy
Page Number: 5
Explanation and Analysis:

Leroy remembers Norma Jean standing catatonically beside him in the hospital and himself think­ing: Who is this strange girl? He had forgotten who she was.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Norma Jean Moffitt, Randy
Page Number: 7
Explanation and Analysis:

Now scientists are saying that crib death is caused by a virus. Nobody knows anything, Leroy thinks. The answers are always changing.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Randy
Page Number: 7
Explanation and Analysis:

Mabel is talking about Shiloh, Tennessee. For the past few years, she has been urging Leroy and Norma Jean to visit the Civil War battleground there. Mabel went there on her honeymoon—the only real trip she ever took. Her husband died of a perforated ulcer when Norma Jean was ten, but Mabel, who was accepted into the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1975, is still preoccupied with going back to Shiloh.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Norma Jean Moffitt, Mabel Beasley
Related Symbols: Shiloh
Page Number: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

Leroy used to tell hitchhikers his whole life story—about his travels, his hometown, the baby. […] In time, he had the feeling that he’d been telling the same story over and over to the same hitchhikers. He quit talking to hitch­ hikers when he realized how his voice sounded—whining and self-pitying… […] Now Leroy has the sudden impulse to tell Norma Jean about himself, as if he had just met her. They have known each other so long they have for­gotten a lot about each other. They could become reacquainted.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Norma Jean Moffitt
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

Later, she says to Leroy, “She just said that about the baby be­cause she caught me smoking. She’s trying to pay me back.”

“What are you talking about?” Leroy says, nervously shuffling blueprints.

“You know good and well,” Norma Jean says. She is sitting in a kitchen chair with her feet up and her arms wrapped around her knees. She looks small and helpless. She says, “The very idea, her bringing up a subject like that! Saying it was ne­glect.”

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt (speaker), Norma Jean Moffitt (speaker), Mabel Beasley
Related Symbols: The Log Cabin
Page Number: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

Something is happening. Norma Jean is going to night school. She has graduated from her six-week body-building course and now she is taking an adult-education course in composition at Paducah Community College. She spends her evenings outlin­ing paragraphs.

“First you have a topic sentence,” she explains to Leroy. “Then you divide it up. Your secondary topic has to be con­nected to your primary topic.”

To Leroy, this sounds intimidating. “I was never any good in English,” he says.

Related Characters: Norma Jean Moffitt (speaker), Leroy Moffitt
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:

She sits at the kitchen table, concen­trating on her outlines, while Leroy plays with his log house plans, practicing with a set of Lincoln Logs. The thought of get­ting a truckload of notched, numbered logs scares him, and he wants to be prepared. As he and Norma Jean work together at the kitchen table, Leroy has the hopeful thought that they are sharing something, but he knows he is a fool to think this. Norma Jean is miles away. He knows he is going to lose her. Like Mabel, he is just waiting for time to pass.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Norma Jean Moffitt
Related Symbols: The Log Cabin
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:

“Your name means ‘the king,”’ Norma Jean says to Leroy that evening. He is trying to get her to go to Shiloh, and she is read­ing a book about another century.

“Well, I reckon I ought to be right proud.”

“I guess so.”

“Am I still king around here?”

Norma Jean flexes her biceps and feels them for hardness. “I’m not fooling around with anybody, if that’s what you mean,” she says.

“Would you tell me if you were?”

“I don’t know.”

“What does your name mean?”

“It was Marilyn Monroe’s real name.”

“No kidding!”

“Norma comes from the Normans. They were invaders,” she says.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt (speaker), Norma Jean Moffitt (speaker)
Related Symbols: Shiloh
Page Number: 14-15
Explanation and Analysis:

At Shiloh, she drives aim­lessly through the park, past bluffs and trails and steep ravines. Shiloh is an immense place, and Leroy cannot see it as a battleground. It is not what he expected. He thought it would look like a golf course. Monuments are everywhere, showing through the thick clusters of trees. Norma Jean passes the log cabin Mabel mentioned. It is surrounded by tourists looking for bullet holes.

“That’s not the kind of log house I’ve got in mind,” says Leroy apologetically.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt (speaker), Norma Jean Moffitt, Mabel Beasley
Related Symbols: The Log Cabin, Shiloh
Page Number: 15
Explanation and Analysis:

“She won’t leave me alone—you won’t leave me alone.” Norma Jean seems to be crying, but she is looking away from him. “I feel eighteen again. I can’t face that all over again.” She starts walking away.

Related Characters: Norma Jean Moffitt (speaker), Leroy Moffitt, Mabel Beasley
Related Symbols: Shiloh
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

General Grant, drunk and furious, shoved the Southerners back to Corinth, where Mabel and Jet Beasley were married years later, when Mabel was still thin and good-looking. The next day, Mabel and Jet visited the battleground, and then Norma Jean was born, and then she married Leroy and they had a baby, which they lost, and now Leroy and Norma Jean are here at the same battleground. Leroy knows he is leaving out a lot. He is leaving out the insides of history. History was always just names and dates to him. It occurs to him that building a house out of logs is similarly empty—too simple. And the real inner workings of a marriage, like most of history, have escaped him.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Norma Jean Moffitt, Mabel Beasley, Randy
Related Symbols: The Log Cabin, Shiloh
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

Leroy gets up to follow his wife, but his good leg is asleep and his bad leg still hurts him. Norma Jean is far away, walking rapidly toward the bluff by the river, and he tries to hobble toward her. Some children run past him, screaming noisily. Norma Jean has reached the bluff, and she is looking out over the Tennessee River. Now she turns toward Leroy and waves her arms. Is she beckoning to him? She seems to be doing an exercise for her chest muscles. The sky is unusually pale—the color of the dust ruffle Mabel made for their bed.

Related Characters: Leroy Moffitt, Norma Jean Moffitt, Mabel Beasley
Related Symbols: Shiloh
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Shiloh LitChart as a printable PDF.
Shiloh PDF

Leroy Moffitt Character Timeline in Shiloh

The timeline below shows where the character Leroy Moffitt appears in Shiloh. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Shiloh
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
Leroy Moffitt watches closely as his wife, Norma Jean, lifts weights. She wants her muscles to... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
Leroy, a truckdriver, has been off the job for four months, ever since he injured his... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
Leroy doesn’t want to get back on the road—he’s frightened of driving any more long hauls—but... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
When Leroy tells Norma Jean about his idea to build them a log house, she is skeptical.... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
...he thinks about how “petroleum products” are something they have in common. Since returning home, Leroy has felt very tender toward her and guilty about having spent so much of their... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy believes that his being home reminds Norma Jean of the “early days of their marriage,”... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
At Christmas, Leroy buys Norma Jean an electric organ, since Norma Jean used to play the piano in... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
As Leroy settles back into life at home, he notices how much his town—and western Kentucky more... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy buys marijuana from a teenager named Stevie Hamilton, the son of a prominent local doctor... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy knows Stevie’s father from high school. Leroy himself is 34. He and Norma Jean were... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
The night Randy died, Leroy and Norma Jean were watching a drive-in double feature of Dr. Strangelove and Lover Come... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy can barely remember Randy anymore—though he remembers in vivid detail a scene from the movie... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
When Leroy gets home from meeting up with Stevie, Norma Jean’s mother Mabel is at their house.... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Today, Mabel has brought Norma Jean and Leroy a dust ruffle she’s made, and Leroy jokes that now he and Norma Jean can... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
When Mabel asks about a pile of yarn in the corner, Leroy replies that he’s making a Star Trek pillowcase. Mabel says this is what women do,... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
...couple gets “tied down,” they should visit Shiloh. Norma Jean brushes off the idea, and Leroy is amused. For years, Mabel has been urging the two of them to visit the... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
After Mabel leaves, Norma Jean reads Leroy a list of jobs he could do, including working at a lumberyard, trucking animals to... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy tells Norma Jean not to worry—he is going to build her a log cabin. But... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
Before Leroy’s accident, whenever he was home for a stretch of time, Norma Jean would stay home... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy begins going for long drives around town. He is a reckless driver, but the prospect... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
One day, Leroy comes home from a drive to find Norma Jean crying in the kitchen; apparently Mabel... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy urges Norma Jean to play the organ to calm herself down. As she plays, Leroy... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
When Norma Jean finishes the song she’s playing, Leroy asks her, “Well, what do you think?” Norma Jean is confused and asks Leroy what... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy wishes he could tell Norma Jean his life story, as if she’s a hitchhiker he’s... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
The next day is a Saturday, and Mabel drops by. Norma Jean is cleaning, and Leroy is looking over the plans for the log house—they have come in the mail at... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Norma Jean puts her hands over her ears. Leroy, sensing his wife’s discomfort, tries to bring Mabel a Diet Pepsi to distract her, but... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
...mother told the story about the baby to get revenge on her for her smoking. Leroy asks what Norma Jean is talking about, and she replies that he knows “good and... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
...community college. She loves the class and one night she even explains her homework to Leroy as she works through the essays she’s writing. When Leroy asks why Norma Jean is... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
...started cooking strange new foods and she has stopped playing the organ. Sometimes, she and Leroy work together at the kitchen table—he is “practicing” with a set of Lincoln Logs while... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
One day, Mabel comes over to the house before Norma Jean gets home from work. Leroy realizes that she might have some answers about Norma Jean’s behavior, so he talks to... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Mabel examines Leroy’s Lincoln Log cabin. She tells him she wouldn’t want to live in a real log... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Mabel advises Leroy to take Norma Jean to Shiloh. They both need to get out of the house,... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Norma Jean walks in with some groceries and Leroy asks if she wants to take her mother to Shiloh on Sunday. Mabel again protests,... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Mabel turns to Leroy and tells him that there is a log cabin at Shiloh. It was standing during... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
That evening, Norma Jean reads a history book as Leroy tries to get her to go to Shiloh. She ignores him and tells him a... (full context)
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
When Leroy asks what Norma Jean’s name means, she tells him that it was Marilyn Monroe’s real... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
On Sunday, Leroy and Norma Jean go to Shiloh. Norma Jean packs a picnic, but Mabel does not... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
At the Shiloh memorial park, which is immense and forested, Leroy is surprised by the landscape. He imagined it would be like a golf course, but... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy comments on what a pretty place Shiloh is, saying that Mabel was right about it... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy and Norma Jean eat their picnic of sandwiches, soft drinks, and pre-packed desserts. Leroy leisurely... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Eventually, Norma Jean balls up her trash and tells Leroy, without looking him in the eye, that she wants to leave him. Leroy is stunned.... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
When Leroy reminds Norma Jean that he’ll be home from now on, she replies that women prefer... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
Leroy asks Norma Jean what he did wrong, and she says he didn’t do anything. He... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy takes a pull of his joint and closes his eyes, letting Norma Jean’s words sink... (full context)
History and the Past Theme Icon
Leroy thinks to himself of General Grant pushing the Confederate army back to Corinth, which is... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
History and the Past Theme Icon
With these thoughts, Leroy knows he’s leaving out “the insides of history” and that history was “always just names... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
When Leroy opens his eyes, Norma Jean is walking away through the cemetery. He gets up to... (full context)
Grief, Love, and Estrangement  Theme Icon
Gender, Independence, and Power Theme Icon
As Leroy gets closer to Norma Jean, she turns and waves her arms. He cannot tell if... (full context)