The House On Mango Street Figurative Language

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How would you feel when you grew to realize the street you were raised on wasn’t good for your wellbeing and that you needed to get away? Well, ‘The House on Mango Street, written by Sandra Cisneros is a story about Esperanza’s childhood growing up in Chicago and how she develops as she gets older throughout the book. She realizes throughout the book that she didn’t belong on Mango Street. It takes whomever is reading it on an adventure through Esperanza’s point of view on her life. The book shows an overview of her childhood through several small short stories put together. ‘The House on Mango Street’ is an engaging story. I believe this because of the constant figurative language that CIsneros uses, Esperanza’s character development, and the conflict that flows throughout the book. These claims are what makes the book engaging and entertaining for the readers. The first reason why ‘The House on Mango Street’ is an engaging story is because of the figurative language that is used in the book. In the chapter, Sally, it says, “Sally is the girl with eyes like Egypt and nylons the color of smoke.” (Cisneros, 81) This connects …show more content…

Either if the conflict involved Esperanza, or involved other people in her life, reading it kept the book engaging. In the chapter A Rice Sandwich, it says, “Yes, I nodded even though I knew that wasn’t my house and started to cry. I always cry when the nun yells at me, even if they’re not yelling.” (Cisneros, 45) This quote shows how Esperanza had to experience conflict, as a small child who wasn’t allowed to eat in the canteen and was humiliated when asking to. This is an example of a segment of conflict that Esperanza had witnessed in the book. The conflict that flows throughout the book keeps the reader on their toes because it’s almost unpredictable to guess what’ll happen next for