Added by: JustGoodNews | Karma: 4306.26 | Fiction literature | 10 October 2011
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The Land of Mango Sunsets
Her sleazy husband left her for a lingerie model who's barely more than a teenager, and her kids are busy with their own lives. But before Miriam Elizabeth Swanson can work herself up into a true snit about it all, her newest tenant, Liz, arrives from Birmingham with plenty of troubles of her own. And then Miriam meets a man named Harrison, who makes her laugh, makes her cry, and makes her feel like a brand-new woman.
Added by: Julbakhk | Karma: 264.01 | Black Hole | 11 April 2011
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The Wheels on the Bus: Mango's Big Dog Parade
The Wheels on the Bus DVD Volume III with characters Mango & Papaya. In this adventure, Mango and Papaya help a little dog who missed his ride to the Big Dog Parade. They learn about taking turns and getting along as they visit Joe's Garage and visit an enchanted forest on their way to the parade. Special stops at the Jungle Bug Adventure, Joe's Garage, an Enchanted Forest, and The Big Dog Parade
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Sandra Cisnero's The House on Mango Street (Bloom's Guides)
In The House on Mango Street, Sandra Cisneros draws on her own experience as a Hispanic woman writer facing obstacles in a patriarchal community resistant to change. Published in 1984 to instantaneous acclaim, the book is made up of lyrical passages, interconnected vignettes, and meditations and observations that resemble prose poems. Cisneros's structurally and thematically bold work explores the often violent coming of age of a young Mexican-American woman.
Compared to the works of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf, "The House on Mango Street" is made up of lyrical passages, interconnected vignettes, and meditations and observations that resemble prose poems. Cisneros' structurally and thematically bold work explores the often-violent coming of age of a young Mexican-American woman. This new title in the "Modern Critical Interpretations" series analyzes the work through full-length critical essays, and features a bibliography, notes on the contributing writers, a chronology of the author's life, an index, and an introductory essay by esteemed critic Harold Bloom.