It improves the readability of the story and also makes them seem more impactful, allowing the emotions to come at you with greater impact. The sentences are often broken down into small samples, especially in the shorter vignettes, forcing the reader to take pauses. There are no quotation marks to be found anywhere in this book, which gives it more of an essay feel, though it’s not as formal. Cisneros’s way of structuring her text seems very experimental, even to modern eyes. specific moments in time), their lengths varying from one or two paragraphs to several pages. The House on Mango Street is structured into a forty-four vignettes (i.e. Her expert manipulation of tone, structure and literary devices helps the reader to empathize with Esperanza and ‘slip into her shoes’, so to speak. The heavy-handed plot is supplemented by Cisneros’s brilliant writing style. Cisneros reaches deep into her own childhood and weaves a beautiful piece of fiction that deals with themes of caste, race, identity, gender, patriarchy. It follows the life of a 12-year-old Chicana girl, Esperanza Cordero, as she deals with the harsh realities of adolescence and life within the fences of an old-fashioned community. The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros is a coming-of-age story.
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