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The House on Mango Street & Woman Hollering Creek & Other Stories

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Book Summary

Sandra Cisneros Biography

Early Years and Education
Career and Writing
Recognition and Awards

About Cisneros' Work

Introduction
The House on Mango Street
"Woman Hollering Creek" and Other Stories
Cisneros' Writing Style

Summary and Analysis of The House on Mango Street

Part 1: The House on Mango Street; Hairs; Boys & Girls; My Name
Part 2: Cathy Queen of Cats; Our Good Day; Laughter; Gil's Furniture Bought & Sold; Meme Ortiz; Louie, His Cousin & His Other Cousin
Part 3: Marin; Those Who Don't; There Was an Old Woman She Had So Many Children She Didn't Know What to Do; Alicia Who Sees Mice
Part 4: Darius and the Clouds; And Some More; The Family of Little Feet; A Rice Sandwich; Chanclas
Part 5: Hips; The First Job; Papa Who Wakes Up Tired in the Dark; Born Bad; Elenita, Cards, Palm, Water
Part 6: Geraldo No Last Name; Edna's Ruthie; The Earl of Tennessee; Sire; Four Skinny Trees
Part 7: No Speak English; Rafaela Who Drinks Coconut & Papaya Juice on Tuesdays; Sally; Minerva Writes Poems; Bums in the Attic
Part 8: Beautiful & Cruel; A Smart Cookie; What Sally Said; The Monkey Garden; Red Clowns
Part 9: Linoleum Roses; The Three Sisters; Alicia & I Talking on Edna's Steps; A House of My Own; Mango Street Says Goodbye Sometimes

Summary and Analysis of "Woman Hollering Creek" and Other Stories

My Friend Lucy Who Smells Like Corn
One Holy Night
There Was A Man, There Was A Woman — Part One
There Was A Man, There Was A Woman, Part Two
There Was A Man, There Was A Woman, Part Three
There Was A Man, There Was A Woman, Part Four

Character List

Character Map: The House on Mango Street

Character Analysis

Esperanza Cordero (The House on Mango Street)
Marin (The House on Mango Street)
Sally (The House on Mango Street)
Alicia (The House on Mango Street)
"Ixchel" ("One Holy Night")
Cleófilas ("Woman Hollering Creek")
Rosario (Chayo) De Leon ("Little Miracles, Kept Promises")

Critical Essays

Themes in Cisneros' Fiction
Form and Language as Characterization in Cisneros' Fiction

Study and Homework Help

Full Glossary for The House on Mango Street & "Woman Hollering Creek" & Other Stories
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Summary and Analysis of "Woman Hollering Creek" and Other Stories

There Was A Man, There Was A Woman, Part Four

"Tin Tan Tan" is a sort of overture to the book's final story, and together these two stories illustrate one of Cisneros' recurring themes, the two different worlds inhabited by a woman and a man — specifically, by a Chicana and the Mexican man with whom she can't help falling in love but with whom she cannot live and still retain her independent identity and self-respect.

Flavio's poem is utterly based on form, and what he says in it is so prescribed by tradition as to be clichéd; it purports to be a baring of his soul, but the reader recognizes that the poet either doesn't mean a word of it, really, or is actually suffering but cannot break out of his self-constructed "romantic" persona long enough to convey any real (as opposed to phony) emotion.

Lupe, his beloved, has come to San Antonio to help her recover from another, longer-term romance with a man who threw her over for a blonde. She is very much into traditional Latino culture and cannot help falling for Flavio's looks and masterful masculinity, but she is irritated when he points out that he really is Mexican and thus doesn't need to rely on various trappings, costumes, and so on. He would also like her to behave like a traditional Latino woman — that is, to be submissive, demure, ladylike — and she can't and/or won't comply. When he leaves, she is partly devastated, partly relieved.

Like "Never Marry a Mexican" and "Eyes of Zapata," "Bien Pretty" is told in a non-linear fashion by its narrator. Although the events of the main "story" (the love affair) are related more or less in chronological order, Lupe tells other things about herself and engages in related musings between and among these events; the effect of this narrative style is to suggest an unplanned, relatively shapeless, stream-of-consciousness exposition of both character and incident. Also as in those other two stories, the image of the woman's gaze (especially the artist's gaze) "possessing" the man — remaking him as her creature — appears here. Lupe, however, is less obsessed and much less bitter than Clemencia in "Never Marry a Mexican"; she seems, as the narrative ends, to be moving on with her life as an independent woman.


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