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Reflection On The House On Mango Street

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Reflection On The House On Mango Street
Shane Mahon Mango Street Post Reading Section 2 English 10B A 8 February 2016

What stuck out most in this section is in the chapter Gil’s Furniture Bought and Sold, when the line “... you could be in there a long time before your eyes notice a pair of gold glasses floating in the dark.” This line stuck out to me because if I ever just saw floating glasses in a pitch black building I would be scared. However Esperanza is not It makes me think how our society and theirs are different. Another part of the chapter that stuck out to me was when Gil starts up the music box and the metaphor “ It’s like all of a sudden he let go of a million moths all over the dusty furniture and swan-neck shadows and in our bones.” This stuck out to me because I don’t quite know exactly what the line means, is it the
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I don’t go into stores that are pitch black. I also don’t buy friends for 5 dollars. I especially don’t get into cars with people that I just met for the first time. Esperanza has grown more in this section then she was in section 1. Esperanza didn’t have friends in section one because she didn’t count her sister and now she has two. I would however later on in this section not have gotten in a car with a person I just met for the first time. I wouldn't have tried to be friends with anyone that was that racist that they moved away for every new family that wasn’t considered normal moving into the neighborhood. I have many questions on this section. The biggest one I have is why would you get into a car of someone you just met? I can’t stress this anymore than I already have that I want to know the answer to this question. I wonder what was going through Esperanza’s mind when she goes into a pitch black store with just her little sister. I would like to know is it normal for people to do all this at this time in society? Did people's parents just let their kids do all these things

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