Marin, under the streetlight, dancing by herself, is singing the same song somewhere. I know. Is waiting for a car to stop, a star to fall, someone to change her life.
Calling The House on Mango Street a novel feels a little strange. It does have central protagonist, the narrator Esperanza, and location, the titular Mango Street. But there's no strong through-line and not a lot of continuity between the vignettes--calling them stories sets expectations they don't often fulfill, of a beginning, a middle, and an endings. Most of them--none are longer than 5 pages--are sketches of a resident of Mango Street that Esperanza doesn't really know. Like a child does, she talks about them based on their most visible characteristic--their car, their absent husband, the time they broke both of their arms, their lack of a last name.
There are around 30 of these vignettes and while most don't progress the previous ones, there is a loose through-line of Esperanza and her friends growing up, coming of age and, it must be said, being harassed and assaulted by various men in the neighborhood. The specters of racism and class hover in the subtext, except for when they become text, as when Esperanza talks about visitors to the neighborhood who huddle together, scared of the same characters she lovingly describes elsewhere.
Sanda Cisneros was a poet before she was a novelist and those skills shine through both in the loose, less-concrete metaphors that appear throughout, and also the rhythm of the prose which sometimes even has little internal rhymes. It's nice to read, but the structure of the book prevented me from ever really sinking into the world of Mango Street, as much as I liked the individual pieces. There are two times, however, when the book breaks this pattern and those stories are the strongest, and most harrowing. First, as alluded to earlier, there's the ongoing story of Esperanza's coming of age and her sexual awakening, always communicated obliquely and tastefully but nevertheless maturing and culminating in a sad, scary recounting of a trip to the fair that ends in ambiguous (but not really) tragedy.
The other character that gets multiple stories (besides Esperanza's sister and her two friends) is Sally, a girl "with Egypt in her eyes" and shiny black hair who adheres to a very traditional religion. Though Cisernos never spells it out, Sally seemed Muslim-coded, and her progression--beautiful girl with from an abusive patriarchal home to easy girl about town to her marriage and miserable hermetic existence with a very jealous marshmallow salesman(?) is a real downer and uncomfortable in ways I'm not altogether sure I like.
In closing stories, Esparanza learns from a trio of fortune telling sisters that she's got a gift for writing, and she's told to come back to the street, to speak for the ones who can't leave. So in the end this is a collection of stories by a writer who made it out, but maybe not really, who will always be a part of the life she worked to leave. It felt a little tidy, ending such a fragmented collection by retroactively adding a wraparound story, but maybe the tidiness is the point, a happy ending for all the residents who will never get a happily ever after of their own.
A fun aside is, I keep calling this book Last House on Mango Street, which evokes a much different book.
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