Essay: The House on Mango Street-Kingston

Sample Essay

Kingston tells her story in chapter “A Song for a Barbarian Reed Pipe,” whereby she remembers her childhood and teenage days (Kingston 72). She tells the reader about her frustration and anger she has to go through in her attempt to make her unappreciative mother happy. After she is unable to make her mother understand her feelings, she starts criticizing everything around her. As she grows up, she starts to appreciate the stories her mother used to tell her. She even tells a folk tale about a warrior cum poet, who is captured by barbarians, only to return to China with foreign songs and dances. She has started to appreciate the Chinese culture.

Essay: The House on Mango Street-Kingston’s Mother

Sample Essay

The story of Kingston’s mother and Brave Orchid is narrated in “Shaman”. (Kingston 55) Her aunt, Brave Orchid used to be a powerful doctor, midwife and had the powers to destroy ghosts back in China. When Kingston was young, she found this to be terrifying and astonishing as well. Most of the stories that Kingston was told by her mother about slavery, babies left to die and a woman stoned to death by the villagers still haunt Kingston. Kingston then, decides to visit her mother who after many years of misunderstanding, they seem to get on well. Brave is also warm towards her something that has never happened before.

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Essay: Being a good Parent

Sample Essay

Being a good parent is among the most tasking responsibilities on earth considering that one has to provide for the physical and psychological needs of all the children one bears.  Most parents want the best for their children, however, the parent daily responsibilities forces them to give divided attention eventually not achieving the noble task being a good parent.  Beside the task of being a good parent being a lifetime requirement, the responsibilities of being a good parent change with time as an offspring grows older.

Essay: The House on Mango Street-Esperanza

Sample Essay

Esperanza makes friends with two Chicana girls, Lucy and Rachel who live on the other side of the street. These three girls together with Esperanza’s young sister, Nenny have lots of fun in the neighborhood. A woman known as Marin tells them sweet stories of boys and they buy a bike. They enjoy playing Double Dutch, a game of jumping over a rope as they engage in intimate conversations (Cisneros 91). The girls are almost getting to puberty and they are drawing the attention of men as witnessed when they walk around in high heels. Esperanza is also seen kissed by an older man at her first job.