Like Mexicans Gary Soto (1952 -) My grandmother gave me bad advice and good advice when I was in my early teens. For the bad advice‚ she said that I should become a barber because they made good money and listened to the radio all day. “Honey‚ they don’t work como burros‚” she would say every time I visited her. She made the sound of donkeys braying. “Like that‚ honey!” For the good advice‚ she said that I should marry a Mexican girl. “No Okies‚ hijo”—she would say— “Look‚ my son. He marry one
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Final Essay: Gary Soto Gary Soto‚ born on April 12th‚ 1952 is a proud Mexican-American that grew up in a very low class neighborhood in Fresno‚ California with both of his parents (Gillespie‚ Becker 100). Soto exclaimed that he was marginal kid; this means that he could have either ended up in prison or easily graduate from college. He put forth more effort in other things than school‚ such as girls or work. As a child and teen Mr. Soto was never interested in his schooling but he tried his
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narrative written by Gary Soto‚ many different literary elements are used to recreate the experience of his guilty six-year old self. Different elements such as contrast‚ repetition‚ pacing‚ diction‚ and imagery. Soto narrates this story as a young boy at a time when he seems to be young and foolish‚ Soto foolmaking mistakes‚ but at the same time hoping to learn from them. Soto uses each of these devices to convey different occurrences in the narrative. Contrast is used when Soto compares himself
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people can recreate what life was like in a Spanish speaking‚ neighborhood‚ barrio‚ like Gary Soto. Gary Soto was born in Fresno‚ California to working-class Mexican-American parents in 1952. Soto’s father died when he was 5 years old from a work accident. Soto used this tragedy to help him write later on in life. He grew up working in the fields of the San Joaquin Valley and in factories‚ so a lot of his poetry is based on everyday experiences for Mexican-Americans like racism‚ identity and poverty.
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Gary Soto once wrote ‚ ¨ I was the first Chicano to write in complete sentences ¨ (“www.goodread.com/ Gary Soto Quotes”) Knowing that Gary Soto was the first Chicano to write a complete sentence gives me a better understanding of what kind of guy Gary Soto is. He helps kids that speak spanish learn english and builds relationships with the kids he helps. He also explains his compassion and love for the people he loves through his poems. Gary Soto uses imagery and relationships to create a
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“Eleven” by Sandra Cisneros and “The Pie” by Gary Soto‚ both highlight the significance and experiences of young characters fighting with personal challenges in their story. Their personal conflict involves both characters being pushed by their own thoughts for the things they had done or what they were told to do. Both stories are told from a first-person point of view‚ which allows the reader to see their conflict and emotions around the issue. Both stories show a development as a person but in
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Gary Soto’s Like Mexicans: Personal Experiences My decision to write in response to Gary Soto’s work‚ "Like Mexicans" was influenced for the most part because of the similarities between myself and Gary Soto‚ and our families included. Gary Soto is a Mexican American male‚ who grew up in the San Joaquin Valley in the industrial part of a town called Fresno. His grandparents came to this Great Valley in search of creating a better life for themselves and their families. I am also a Mexican
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Gary Soto Essay Juan Martinez Gary Soto was born on April 12‚ 1952 in Fresno‚ California and is a Mexican-American author and poet. Gary’s parents are Manuel Soto and Angie Soto. In his youth‚ he worked in the fields of the San Joaquin Valley and in factories in Fresno. Gary’s father died in 1957‚ when he was five years old. His family struggled to find work and he had little time and encouragement for school‚
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hits some harder than others and it smote the naïve six year old Gary Soto with a compelling blow. In his autobiographical narrative Gary Soto vividly expresses the guilt he felt for stealing a pie from the perspective of his six year old self with a wide-eyed misunderstanding of religion. Using both irony and imagery Soto creates a powerful image of how his poisonous guilt pestered him. In the first paragraph of his narrative Soto sets the backdrop of religion‚ a theme that plays a major role
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Gary Soto Post AssessmentGuilt is the price we pay willingly for doing what we are going to do anyway -Isabelle Holland. Guilt is something we create for ourselves. In the passage‚ Gary Soto emphasizes how guilty‚ paranoid‚ and shameful he felt in his inner conscience after stealing an apple pie. He expresses his guilt‚ shame‚ and paranoia by describing his outer self‚ his inner self‚ and the people around him. How Soto describes his inner self emphasizes on how fearful he is. The great sense of
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