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The House On Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros
  The story is told by Esperanza, and begins when she first moves to Mango Street, a poor,
  Hispanic neighborhood in Chicago. Esperanza says that she has lived in many different
  places. She implies that she is close to her family, and describes their interactions and
  even their hair. She tells us she does not like her name, because it is too long and because
  it was her grandmother’s name. Her grandmother did not want to get married, but was
  forced to by Esperanza’s grandfather. Slowly, Esperanza begins to meet people in the
  neighborhood. She meets Cathy, a stuck-up girl, and Lucy and Rachel, who live across
  the street. Sisters, these two will become Esperanza’s best friends on Mango Street. They
  are loud and sassy, just the opposite of Esperanza, but this is what she likes about them.
  Esperanza talks about her younger sister, Nenny, to whom she feels close in a strange way,
  though sometimes they annoy each other. For example, when they visit a used furniture store and
  the owner plays a music box with music so beautiful Esperanza begins to cry, Nenny naively
  tries to buy the box. The man says it is not for sale, and Esperanza is embarrassed by her sister.
  Esperanza describes other people from the neighborhood. Meme Ortiz has a dog that is big and
  clumsy, just like him. Louie’s cousin got arrested for stealing a car. Marin is waiting for some
  rich man to find her and take her away from Mango Street. Esperanza understands that people
  feel scared when they come to Mango Street because the area is poor and they don’t know
  everyone there is harmless. But she also knows that her own community is scared when they go
  to other neighborhoods, too. She continues with her descriptions: the Vargas children are so
  numerous, and so out of control, that people don’t even try to prevent them from hurting
  themselves anymore, even though they do it all the time. Esperanza’s friend Alicia is going to the
  university, even though her father makes her do all the housework ever since her mother died.
  Darius, who goes to school with Esperanza and usually only says foolish things, one day tells
  everyone that a cloud he sees in the sky is God. Everyone questions him, but he simply repeats
  his statement, and Esperanza thinks he is wise.
  
  One day Esperanza, Lucy, Rachel and Nenny talk about all the different names for clouds and
  snow. This evolves into a mock-insulting name-calling game. The girls are poetic and humorous.
  Soon after, they are given some second-hand ladies’ shoes. Feeling like grown women, admiring
  their skinny legs in the high heels, they parade around the neighborhood. But when a bum tries to
  get Rachel to kiss him, telling her how pretty she is, the girls get nervous and go home. They
  store the shoes away, and when one of their mothers throws them out, no one protests.
  One day, Esperanza decides she wants to eat in the "canteen" with the children who don’t live
  close enough to school to go home for lunch. However, one of the nuns at her school realizes that
  she lives only a few blocks away, and tells Esperanza she has to go home. Starting to cry and
  feeling ashamed of where she lives, Esperanza can hardly speak. The nun tells her she can stay
  just for that day, but when Esperanza goes to the canteen, there’s nothing exciting about it and all
the kids watch her as she cries.
  
  Esperanza’s mother buys her all new clothes for a cousin’s baptismal party, but she forgets to
  buy new shoes, so Esperanza has to wear her old, worn out ones. At the party she feels
  embarrassed, and won’t dance, even when a boy her age asks her. Then her Uncle Nacho forces
  her to dance, telling her how pretty she is, until she relaxes and dances with him in front of
  everyone, thrilled at the attention.
  
  Soon after, Nenny, Rachel and Lucy skip rope and sing rhymes about getting hips: what hips are
  good for and what they will do with them once they get them. Nenny, being younger, doesn’t
  quite understand the game.
  
  At her first job, Esperanza works at a photo finisher’s. She feels intimidated at first, unsure of
  how to act around all the older people, until an elderly man comes in for his later shift, and is
  friendly to her. She is grateful, until he asks her for a birthday kiss, and grabs her, kissing her on
  the mouth, and will not let her go.
  
  Esperanza’s father comes into her room to tell her that his father is dead. She is the oldest child,
  so she must tell her siblings to behave that day. Her father begins to cry, and she comforts him.
  In contrast to this tenderness, Esperanza plays a game with her friends, imitating her sick aunt,
  who is bedridden. Coincidentally, the aunt dies that day, and Esperanza feels very guilty, since
  her aunt always cared for her, listening to her stories and taking her seriously.
  
  Esperanza visits a fortune-teller, Elenita, a neighbor who lives with her family in a cluttered
  apartment full of candles. Elenita tells Esperanza she will have a "home in the heart," which
  disappoints Esperanza, who wants a real home. Marin meets a Mexican immigrant, Geraldo, at a
  dance. Afterwards, he is hit by a car and dies. He has no identification and no one knows who he
  is. Marin goes with him to the hospital. Ruthie lives next door with her mother. Even though she
  is an adult, she plays with the children and sings to herself. She is very dependent on her mother,
  and the kids like her a lot. She tells stories about herself, none of which seem to be true.
  Earl is a jukebox repairman who lives nearby and works nights. He brings strange women to his
  house, and does not seem to have a wife who lives with him.
  
  Sire is a boy who stares at Esperanza when she walks past his house. She tries to stare back but
  she is also intimidated. He and his girlfriend Lois stay out late and seem to have adventures, and
  Esperanza is jealous, even though her parents tell her to stay away from Sire.
  
  Esperanza can relate to the four skinny trees planted outside her house. They don’t seem to
  belong there, but they continue to grow, strong and defiant. Mamacita is a very large woman
  from Mexico. Her husband brought her and their son to Chicago, but she is lonely for home, and
  does not leave her apartment (no one is sure why) and refuses to speak English. She and her
  husband fight, and she cries when her young son begins to sing a Pepsi commercial.
  
  Rafaela is young and pretty and her husband won’t let her leave the house when he goes out. She
  asks the neighborhood kids to buy her coconut or papaya juice, and they send it up to her on a
  string. Sally is a beautiful girl Esperanza’s age who wears makeup and black clothes. She talks to
  boys, and Esperanza admires her, not believing that she is dangerous or bad (as some people say)
  and pitying Sally because she has to change her clothes and rub off her makeup before she goes
  home. Esperanza believes that what Sally really wants is love, and she understands that.
  Minerva, as the chapter title says, writes poems. She is slightly older than Esperanza, but already
  is married and has children. Her husband fights with her and leaves often, and she cries, not
  knowing what to do. She and Esperanza read their poems to each other.
  
  Esperanza vows that she will not be superior when she gets rich and has her own house. She will
  invite homeless people to live with her happily. Esperanza does not want to depend on anyone.
  She wants to control men with her beauty, but never settle down with one. She wants to be free
  and strong. Esperanza’s mother tells her to stay in school, because she herself regrets leaving.
  She says she was smart, and Esperanza silently agrees. But she left school because she felt
  ashamed of her clothes, Mrs. Cordero explains, and tells Esperanza not to make the same
  mistake. Sally admits to Esperanza that her father beats her, though she will not tell anyone else.
  She prepares to live with Esperanza for awhile, but then her father apologizes, and she goes
  home with him. Soon after, he beats her again.
  
  The neighborhood children play in an abandoned garden. Esperanza likes to play there, even
  though some people say she is getting too old. Sally stands at the edge of the garden, talking to
  some boys, who take her keys and say she has to kiss them to get them back. Esperanza tries to
  help Sally by trying to fight the boys, but everyone, Sally included, tells her to go away, making
  her feel foolish. She doesn’t understand the game, or why Sally would want to play it. She runs
  away and cries, and never goes back to the garden after that. Sally takes Esperanza to a carnival,
  where she leaves with a boy and tells Esperanza to wait. Sally never comes back, and Esperanza
  is molested by a group of boys. Soon after, Sally gets married. She says she is happy, but her
  husband never lets her go out or see her friends. Esperanza meets the Three Sisters, aunts of
  Lucy and Rachel. They tell Esperanza she is special and understand that she wants to leave
  Mango Street. They tell her she must not forget her roots, and that she must come back for those
  she leaves behind. Though Esperanza agrees, she is still disgusted with Mango Street. She tells
  Alicia she won’t come back until someone fixes it up, even though Alicia tries to tell her that
  Mango is part of her, whether she likes it or not.
  
  Esperanza dreams of a house just for her, where she can write in peace and not have to take care
  of anyone else. At the end of the story, she finally learns that Mango Street is part of her, but
  does not define her. She understands that, through her writing, she can ease the pain of her
  memories. Sometimes, she says, the ghost of Mango Street lets go of her. So The House On
  Mango Street is a book I think people should read because of how Esperanza thinks and should
  open up a new perspective.

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