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House On Mango Street Persepolis Comparison

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Warm air and the sickly sweet smell of the swooning cherry blossom trees. This is the place where I grew up, where I took my first steps, said my first words, and had my first haircut. As much as I hate small towns, without growing up in Madison I don’t know where or what I would be doing right now. In both books The House on Mango Street and Persepolis the main characters had to deal with growing up in a slightly damaged society but they managed to push past it, just like everyone else who has struggled with a past but not brave enough to write it down. “Maybe I’ll be even better as Fidel Castro!” ( Persepolis, pg 16) Marjane had said this in the book, at the time she was a small child no older than the age of seven. Marjane had looked up to Fidel Castro, who was an evil dictator, she put her faith into the wrong person. As much as I would …show more content…

I wanted to know what it felt like to be in a cell filled with water.” (Persepolis, pg 25) Marjane wants to understand what her grandfather went through after he became a communist. “You girls too young to be wearing shoes like that.” (The House on Mango Street, pg 41) Esperanza wants to understand why the shoes are dangerous for her and her friends to wear. In both quotes the girls are trying to understand something, I relate to them in a very similar way. My grandmother comes from a big family,she has 3 brothers and 3 sisters, when I was about six years old my great aunt Barb was diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer. I was still young so I didn’t fully understand why we went from seeing her every holiday to almost everyday, even with the radiation treatments that made her once olive tan skin to almost ghostly pale she always saw the better side of things. Barb never gave up she put up a good fight but in the end it caught up to her, she died when I was eight and the funeral was super sad it was hard for me to understand her death but I knew deep down she wasn’t coming

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